Wednesday, July 23rd 2008
RAIDON Rolls-out a DIY SSD Solution
With the prices of solid state drives (SSD) on the fall, this gadget comes a tad late, but if you're (still) looking for an inexpensive SSD-like solution, Taiwanese manufacturer RAIDON unveiled an SSD enclosure, a device that holds up to two Compact Flash (CF) cards in either RAID 1 or NRAID (capacity increment) modes. Another demerit is that while the prices of SSDs are on a fall, the prices of CF cards aren't. 16 GB cards are selling for prices which make buying two 16 GB CF cards pointless compared to 32 GB MLC SSDs. What looks like the a 2.5 inch SSD with the hood closed, clearly isn't. The enclosure has the same exact dimensions of a 2.5 inch drive with mount-holes. The device supports both IDE and SATA host interfaces.
Source:
Hexus.net
15 Comments on RAIDON Rolls-out a DIY SSD Solution
then it would make sense
but year for a mere £10 difference roughly
and aren't they sloww?
i tried to mod my IPTV with new CF 145x speed @1GB but XP was ultra slow on write/read.
Transferspeed is/was far away from my sata 2.5"
am i wrong? correct me.........
but i would buy it as my lappi only got one slot for hdd and with that i would be able to upgrade right? just plug in another card.
However, there were Compact Flash sized hard drives released in the market a few years back, that were mechanically based. I know Seagate and Sony both released version like this to help increase the storage size available in the form factor. However, once flash memory became cheaper, they died off.
They were fragile, and used a lot of power.
EDIT: i'll go grab one today IF someone can find me 2x 8gig CF cards for cheap.
UPS 3 Day Shipping is $7, but if you change it to the 3-7 Day "Eggsaver" shipping, it is only $2.69.
Edit: I guess, now that I look at it, if you use 8GB CF cards for $26 a piece, you can build a 16GB SSD for under $100. That really is pretty good price wise. It is only the 16GB CF cards that are priced too high.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but SSD drives write on different parts of the flash all the time to limit the wear and tear, while CF doesn't do it, they have no "brain". Make this a swap drive and see smoke coming out soon :p (well not, but they will fail, they have to, or I'll be sad as I would have used a flash card swap drive couple years now..)
edit: CF to IDE adapter is 3 bucks, those with free IDE slots on motherboard try that first. Now if someone has been using something like that with heavy usage for a while, please tell. 2-4GB card would work fine as a swap and cost next to nothing. Or go for two CF to SATA adapters and RAID-0 them :)