I'll be building some new machines in the near future for home and work. As I ponder whether to make the 64 bit jump or not, I'm also wondering if it's worth putting some castoff SCSI parts into a new box.
I have a leftover IBM 36G 15K UW160 drive that I pulled from a file server. I also just picked up an LSI Logic UW160 adapter, which I know works well with this drive. The IBM is fast (albeit a bit loud) and I thought I'd put it into a new workstation build as the system disk, and put a big SATA drive in for storage.
Given how fast SATA drives are these days, should I bother with the SCSI at all? I hate to see a 15K drive go to waste, but it is, after all, 2002's technology...;-)
Same as jankerson... I recently just started using a full IDE/SATA system and put my SCSI Drives on hold. Now that I've been suing an IDE main drive, I do feel a slight stutter in the drives performance but nothing I can't get used to.
As stated, if you already have the drive and the SCSI card, use it! If you still have to go out and buy it, its probably not worth the extra cost.
I personally still like SCSI and will reinstall Windows onto it because of the small difference I can feel. Its also lightning fast to transfer from one SCSI drive to another. Much, much faster than IDE133 or SATA150.
? Quantum Physics ? Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
Well the adapter cost $15 off of Ebay, and the drive is sitting right here. All I need is an 80-68 pin adapter for it, and I believe that there are compatible XP64 drivers for the adapter... so I might as well use it.
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