Thank you. I'm out...
Kidding.
So even though your response was not needed and an attempt at passive superiority (I could be wrong).
It is faster to image half the contents than the entirety. If I have an external with similar image I can link up the data portion if it was not the failed drive and off I go. Alternately I can keep working in the boot volume while I restore the data drive if it was the dead member. So it is slightly beneficial. If not to you then fine. Someone else may see this benefit.
I can't tell the difference from a properly (love the superiority assumptions all over this place) configured Fusion drive and my sym links to velociraptor. I only link HDD to movies, music and docs, and Steam games.
And to answer the veiled question yes, I have zero backups. Don't need 'em. They are useless and a conspiracy. I do have a RAID5 I use so that is close to the same thing, right?
Please read in this enormous sarcasm.
Wow ... you don't even know me and you have attempted to profile my whole personality in one post. Impressive!
I love sarcasm, so if that is your thing, keep it up ... practice makes perfect! If you read my other posts here, you will find that I genuinely try to help people in areas I do have experience ... I seldom resort to any form of sarcasm or "superiority complex", although I am tempted sometimes. But I digress...
I was simply trying to give some advice to the OP.
I currently have my Mac Pro dual boot OS X for
perceived speed testing:
1) bootable RAID-0 SSD on SATA-III PCIe with symlinks to more static data on HD (yes, I do use them too).
2) bootable single SSD in Fusion, having also testing separate SSD and HD
Yes, for large files (video, movies, photo), they will load at hard disk speeds since that is where Fusion has them stored. I put mine on a static hard disk partition not managed by the Fusion algorithms. If I wanted more speed, I would put them on a 2 or 3 disk RAID-0, but not needed for videos. Or, if they fit, on a RAID-0 SSD (I use a 1TB one for current photo library files).
If you use Migration Assistant to initially load your Fusion drive, OS X stuff (apps, libraries, etc.) will load first and already be on the SSD when the user starts using it. However, if you clone your system (with CCC or other), you will probably load the Fusion drive alphabetically, and may have OS X components initially on the hard drive, which will take some usage time for all to migrate over to the SSD.
Glad you keep backups ... it seems many posters here who are the most worried about multi-drive disk failures, don't keep any backup at all. I find that really ironic!
-howard