Eagle Tech Consus D-Series 2xSATA External Raid Storage Review
Other
by SidneyWong
@ 2007-07-06
The newly released Consus D-Series 3.5inch hard drive enclosure provides room from 2 HDDS, it supports Windows XP/Vista and Mac OS 10.2 or above in Raid 0 or JBOD via USB and Firewire. When high capacity is what you are after together with safe off-site backup, this could be what you are looking for. Now, let´s find out what the D-series can deliver.
Installation & Sound Test
Performance
Closer Look & Test Setup:The Consus D series employed
Oxford OXUF924DSB for USB/Firewire chip and
SST39VF400A from SST for software program storage.
As commented by JMke (our editor) that software Raid 0 in USB 2.0 and Firewire would not benefit much of a speed increase. Let's find out if he speaks the "truth" :)
Windows XP Test Setup |
Case and Cooling | Sonata II: - 120 mm exhaust |
CPU | AMD Opteron 165 @2.82 Ghz, 1.40vcore |
Motherboard | DFI LanParty UT Ultra D (2x40mm fan added over PWM) |
Memory | GSKill PC4400 4x512Mb |
Other | DVD R/W7900GSWD 250GB SATA HDDAMD Stock Heatsink FanXP Pro SP2 + latest updates |
I am using two Seagate 500GB HDDs supplied by
Geeks Computer Parts reviewed
here.
Test Methodology and Results:Files read/write I use 10.7 GB Assortment (11671 files 653 folders)
DVD read/write I use "Shooter & Taking Lives" 13.2 GB
HD Tach
USB 2.0 Read/Write
I am not going to list the read/write performance using Firewire, because they are identical with very minimal difference of a few seconds.
HD Tach - Raid 0 2x500GB
HD Tach - Single Drive 500GB
There is no gain in using Raid 0; in fact, it shows a slight gain in using single drive on average read speed of 36.1MB/s versus 35.8MB/s in favor of single HDD.
Temperature/Exhaust & Conclusion
Temperature/Exhaust:The front air intake grill has 5 slots with which you could hardly slide in a piece of letter size paper tells you how restrictive if any air could get in.
The exhaust is less restrictive in comparison, but not much better. Using an external probe, I measured 48°C HDD surface temp on the one that is "on top" at 24°C room temp.
Conclusion:Is two better than one when you have two extra small capacity SATA hard drives sitting around after an upgrade? At a retail price of ~$70 you could get two Eagle Consus T or M series for less; especially when software operated Raid 0 does not give any speed increase over JBOD spanning or Single Drive via USB or Firewire.
It would be a different story if Raid 1 was implemented instead of Raid 0, since there is no gain in using Raid 0 for the sake of more secure data protection.
PROS
Ability to use two HDDs in a single external housing
USB & Firewire connections
CONS
Software Raid 0: no speed increase, higher data loss risk.
Restricted air flowI like to thank Eagle Tech for the review sample, and
Geeks Computer Parts for supplying us the Seagate HDDs in this review.