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RAID 3 Recovery – Servers
Need help with RAID 3 Server Recovery? DriveCrash™ can help. Don’t panic!
In most cases (over 97% of them) using the correct procedures, data can be recovered from inaccessible or defective storage devices. Contact DriveCrash™ to learn more about RAID 3 Recovery.
All recovery jobs are treated on an urgent basis and recovery in most cases takes less than 24 hours to complete. With over 24 years of Experience we will recover all data possible.
RAID 3 Recovery – Servers
We Recover all makes and models of RAID Servers. These RAID 3 manufacturers include:
- • Microsoft Windows™ Servers
- • Windows 2000 Server™
- • Windows Server 2003™ (Win2K3),
- • Windows Server 2003 R2™
- • Windows Server 2008™ (Win2K8, W2K8)
- • Windows Server 2008 R2™
- • Windows Server 2011™
- • Microsoft Hyper-V Server™ (Windows Server Virtualization)
- • Mac OS X™ Servers
- • Mac OS X Server 1.0™ Rhapsody
- • Mac OS X Server 10.0™ Cheetah
- • Mac OS X Server 10.1™ Puma
- • Mac OS X Server 10.2™ Jaguar
- • Mac OS X Server 10.3™ Panther
- • Mac OS X Server 10.4™ Tiger
- • Mac OS X Server 10.5™ Leopard
- • Mac OS X Server 10.6™ Snow Leopard
- • Mac OS X Server 10.7™ Lion
- • Linux™ Distributions
- • Ubuntu™ Servers
- • Debian™ Servers
- • FreeNAS™ Servers (FreeBSD™)
- • VMWare Server™
- • Apache™ Servers
- • Sun xVM™ Server
- • Solaris™ Servers (SunOS)
RAID 0+3 or RAID 03 is a dedicated parity array across striped disks. Each block of data at the RAID 3 level is broken up amongst RAID 0 arrays where the smaller pieces are striped across disks.
RAID 30 is known as striping of dedicated parity arrays. It is a combination of RAID level 3 and RAID level 0. RAID 30 provides high data transfer rates, combined with high data reliability. RAID 30 is best implemented on two RAID 3 disk arrays with data striped across both disk arrays