*Vanguard* <no-(E-Mail Removed)> wrote
in message news:rZqdnSio481S_v_dRVn-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Rod Speed wrote
>> *Vanguard* <no-(E-Mail Removed)> wrote
>>> Rod Speed wrote
>>>> Makes more sense to bin them and just buy the
>>>> cheapest new drive you can find after rebates etc.
>>> Or just use them for backups. Use DriveImage to
>>> save disk images of your system drives. You could
>>> use a removable drive bay. With a removable drive
>>> bay, you could even boot different operating systems
>>> without having to use a boot manager (that usurps the
>>> bootstrap program in the MBR), or using them for different
>>> types of data files. If you'll be swapping the drives a lot,
>>> make sure to get a good quality removable drive kit.
>> Same problem. You'll be spending more on removable drive
>> bays in total than a brand new drive of the same total capacity.
> Buy one chassis for $25 (http://snipurl.com/5avm).
> Then buy a tray at $15 for each drive (http://snipurl.com/5avn).
> Over half a dozen drives, the chassis and tray together cost all of $19,
Like I said, you'll be spending more on removable drive bays
in total than a brand new drive of the same total capacity.
> and less with more drives.
Its the total price that matters with that approach.
>> And removable drive bays are a kludge that flout the ATA standard.
> Oh, and you think using boot managers isn't without even further risk?
Nope, not with one thats properly debugged.
> There is no "flout" of the ATA standard.
Fraid so, particulary on the ribbon cable detail.
> The ones I mentioned are not for hot-swapping
> drives. Shutdown, swap the drive, boot.
I wasnt talking about that.
> Adds all of about 10 seconds over using a boot
> manager to load different operating systems
And requires that manual operation,
and some risk of dropping the drive etc.
> but without any pollution,
What ?
> isolates the OS drives to prevent corruption,
Anyone with a clue has systems fully backed up anyway.
> and allows for protected data storage (because the
> drive isn't in the machine and it can locked away).
And backups on removable media thats a hell of a lot
more portable than a great pile of old drives each in their
own removable drive bay tray are a lot easier to do real
offsite backups with, completely eliminating any risk due to
the house burning down or floating away in a flood etc etc etc.