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Yes, you can configure any hard drive in a raid configuration if you have the drivers, and the Motherboard supports Rail configs. Check with the motherboard mfg to see the Raid configuration supported and google the instructions on how to set it up. You'll be just fine with this. Remember that it's only 240 gigs. Not a lot of storage. Mirroring is a great way to save your data if one drive goes down.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I use my drives with removable racks so I can clone one to the other so I don't see whey this wouldn't work in a raid situation.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Raid 5 would be the cheapest. It's acceptable for use on SSD. Raid 10 would give you the best performance and have the least wear and tear on the drives while also giving you the most reliability.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This depends completely on whose RAID you're using. If you're intending to use it for software RAID from within Windoze or Linux then it will likely work fine. If you're intended purpose is to use it with a Hardware RAID controller of some type then it will depend completely on the firmware. Some controllers will want a spindle speed and other information that are simply not available from a SSD, while others will work fine. The more "complete" /advanced the RAID is, the more likely that a SSD of this level will not work and you'll need an SSD designed for RAID purposes.
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