According to tests conducted by the Arizona Mac Users Group with an Areca ARC-1221x PCIe RAID card in a MacPro and array of eight Seagate 320GB drives ($80.00 per drive at NewEgg,com)
http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/areca/1221x/
a RAID 5 array witha 2.04 TB capacity averaged 420MBS read and 438 MBS write (the average is a result of testing at capacities from 0% to 100% full (e.g. at 50% full the numbers are 457MBS write and 446 MBS read). A RAID 6 array (which can suffer two drive failures and rebuild itself as opposed to a RAID 5 array which can suffer only one drive failure and rebuild itself) with the same number of drives and 1.75 TB capacity, averaged 359 MBS read and 377 MBS write. This setup is significantly faster and much less expensive than the Apple RAID card and 4 15,000 RPM SAS drives (Apple advertises a maximum read/write of 250 MBS.) (The Areca card is $650 at NewEgg.com, the Enhance Box E8ML eight bay enclosure is $442.82 from NowDirect, the two necessary cables are $120.00 - - for both from Amazon).
Significantly, the Areca 1221x appears to be unique among currently available 3rd party RAID cards for the MacPro in that one can boot from drives attached to it. Drives attached to current PCIe cards made by Firmtek, Sonnet or, as far as I know, any other manufacturer are not bootable as their drivers load during startup, where as the Areca card's driver is in its (upgradeable) firmware.
My question is this: is there some drawback to using this setup simultaneously as a statup drive and as a sample drive? I know that the usual recommended setup is for a separate startup drive and a drive or RAID 0 array for the sample libraries, but this setup is far faster than that simpler setup would be. I am hoping for comment from someone at VSL regarding this as well as other forum participants.
Thanks