Trashbytes wrote on 2025-06-29, 15:10:Server drives are fine so long as they come with a picture of its smart reading, I have a good number of the Intel server drives […]
Show full quote
Server drives are fine so long as they come with a picture of its smart reading, I have a good number of the Intel server drives that all had between 97% - 100% life remaining, and even more drives that have never actually been used but kept as spares.
They are usually far cheaper than the Samsung drives which get the snot kicked out of them by a ton of random reads and writes but don't come with any pictures of their smart reading and even fewer with guarantees of longevity even if they do.
I grabbed a 10 drive lot recently of 1tb Intel server drives that were still sealed and were unused, they just wanted to clear their old stock of spares, got that lot for 250 bucks.
Good server drives even used are perfectly serviceable for a retro system not being used 24/7.
I must be weird, but honestly prefer just buying modern drives. Sure, those old stuff is theoretically better in some ways, but... it is like 10 years old at this time, who knows when, why and how it is going to die?
It is becoming harder and harder to find actually good SATA drives but honestly, given on this systems performance is severely limited by other things, it does not matter that much. Typical SMI2259XT+TLC is good enough and dirt cheap.
For me the biggest concern in a system i am going to practically use is reliability. Not in a sense of preserving data, though i do like my saves, but in a sense that system needs to work, reliably. When i actually have time to play a game or something i want to do that, not troubleshoot/fix faulty hardware. So no RAID0, no vintage HDDs, no vintage SSDs... though i do use some of my own older SSDs...
That's why i generally build systems i am going to use with reliability in mind, even if it affects how "period correct" the system is. And why i prefer not to OC such systems.
Apparently everyone has their own idea of what a system like this should ideally be, which results in interestingly different builds.
nd22 wrote on 2025-06-29, 16:29:
I actually used an Intel SSD back in 2016 when I first started building the system! However I replaced with a Raptor because I love the sound when starting up XP - I know I'm weird!!! - and it just seems right in this system!
What's weird i do like seek/head movement sounds myself, apparently many people do.
But the whine of disks simply spinning gives me a headache in a couple hours. Which is, above any other considerations, obviously a dealbreaker.
If an option existed to have one but not another i'd probably do that, regardless of reliability concerns mentioned above (i can setup a proper automated backup if i have to). But sadly no such thing exists...
AthlonXP 2200+,ECS K7VTA3 V8.0,1GB,GF FX5900XT 128MB,Audigy 2 ZS
AthlonXP 3200+,Epox EP-8RDA3I,2GB,GF 7600GT 256MB,Audigy 4
Athlon64 x2 4800+,Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe,4GB,GF 8800GT 1GB,Audigy 4
Core2Duo E8600,ECS G31T-M3,4GB,GF GTX660 2GB,Realtek ALC662