Hot Deal - RocketRAID 4320 for $329
by Gary Key on March 20, 2009 12:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Gary's First Looks
We receive a lot of press releases each day for various products from a wide variety of sources. We will start providing these on a more timely basis, but one press release this week really caught our eye. HighPoint Technologies recently sent us their RocketRAID 4320 for a full review and now through a partnership with NewEgg, the cost has been reduced to $329 for a limited time. So far our testing results are very positive and we should have a review available shortly. In the meantime, here is the official press release.
"HighPoint Technologies is partnering with NewEgg.com the nationwide #2 ranking e-commerce website to offer the RocketRAID 4320 – an 8 port SAS RAID Controller with the Intel IOP348 for $329. The RocketRAID 4320 with the Intel IOP348 at 1.2GHz is the industry fastest and most reliable I/O Engine in the SAS RAID controller industry.
By offering the RocketRAID 4320 at $329 on NewEgg.com customers benefit from a 100% Savings when compared to other manufactures of 8 port SAS RAID controllers with the Intel IOP348 which are priced at $625.
HighPoint has recognized that the struggling economy has forced many businesses into offer lower costing products to entice customer spending. Offering the RocketRAID 4320 at $329 benefits the customer as they will get the highest value for their purchase with the industry’s highest performing and most robust SAS Hardware RAID controller.
The RocketAID 4320 supports the fastest bus speeds with PCI-Express x8 and offers two internal mini-SAS cable connectors that are fast, secure and clutter free. Support for a battery back up unit (BBU) maximizes data protection without sacrificing performance.
SAS scalability fulfills the ever increasing need for adding more storage capacity. Scaling to higher capacities enable customers to pay only for storage they need. Scalability is ideal for file server and content intensive storage platforms requiring the best combination of cost and capacity storage solution.
Backward compatibility to SATA hard drives fulfills the need of storage hungry applications. The lower cost and higher capacity SATA drives are ideal for back up, archiving and storing detail media files.
The higher performing 15K RPM SAS hard drives offers the highest sustained transfer rates for performance hungry applications. Streaming I/O involves digital video and requires high sustained read and write throughput. The RocketRAID 4320 with 15K RPM SAS drives can achieve 1GB/s of sustained throughput for these streaming I/O environments.
Don’t miss out on the huge savings for your storage needs. Purchase the RocketRAID 4320 for $329 exclusively through NewEgg.com."
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bhigh - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
Intel IOP348 controllers are not supported on OpenSolaris or OpenBSD. You're better off with an LSI1068 based card for PCIe, or a Marvell Hercules-2 based card for PCI-X.tshen83 - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
Don't know about OpenBSD, but Solaris is definitely supported.http://www.sun.com/storagetek/storage_networking/h...">http://www.sun.com/storagetek/storage_networking/h...
Adaptec even posts drivers here:
http://www.adaptec.com/en-US/downloads/unix/sun_so...">http://www.adaptec.com/en-US/downloads/...ctId=SAS...
I agree, from platform maturity perspective, LSI 1068E and 1078 are more mature than IOP348. However, there is simply no argument from the performance perspective. There is no way a 500Mhz 1078 can beat Dual core 1.2Ghz IOP348. It will typically show up when you go past 500MB-600MB/sec or so. I don't see any LSI competitiveness unless they release SAS-II based IO processor that runs at least clock-parity.
http://www.adaptec.com/NR/rdonlyres/A62F53C7-6C95-...">http://www.adaptec.com/NR/rdonlyres/A62...C83C43/0...
mikencube - Thursday, October 22, 2009 - link
thanks for the post.good information.mikencube - Thursday, October 22, 2009 - link
Bing,google and microsoft are now joining forceshttp://www.webpromoterservice.com">http://www.webpromoterservice.com
http://www.expresspack.co.uk">http://www.expresspack.co.uk
http://www.techsava.co.uk/wii-accessories-15-c.asp">http://www.techsava.co.uk/wii-accessories-15-c.asp
AMDfreak - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
In your review, please note whether the Highpoint SAS to SATA cable (http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/int_ms1m4s.htm)c...">http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/int_ms1m4s.htm)c... be used.AMDfreak - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
corrected link...http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/int_ms1m4s.htm">http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/int_ms1m4s.htm
blyxx86 - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
Yes you can use that cable with the 4320.Referenced in two locations.
http://www.highpoint-tech.com/PDF/RocketRAID_Cable...">http://www.highpoint-tech.com/PDF/RocketRAID_Cable...
http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/series_cable.htm">http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/series_cable.htm
MarcusAsleep - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
Yeah,The documents were a bit confusing, but that looks right. Googled price is about $14 each so an extra $28 to hook up 8 SATA drives -- not too bad.
Mark.
Rob94hawk - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link
Sounds like something I would put in my pc just for bragging rights. I would rather get an Intel SSD.CherryBOMB - Sunday, March 22, 2009 - link
The RJ45 jack on this card allows for the connection to a router for access of data from the cards array from other PC's on the network right? Thanks