Why did Anandtech test only the default settings?
The Joe Sixpack users have no idea about stripe/cluster size and whatnot when they setup RAID-0 ... they plugin the drives, format them and go with leaving everything on default ... so those are the results they would see. I doubt many would know info like
http://faq.storagereview.com/StripeSize ... or know how to format their HDDs with a different cluster size. I also doubt they'll sit down a couple days and recreate/reformat their RAID-0 and benchmark their main applications to see which cluster/stripe size combo would be the best match.
Your benches are nice and show the STR and it is no surprise that the RAID-0 wins there by a big margin. STR is important when you move many big files all the time or work with huge files like with Photoshop. The pure STR increase could be also seen in this older RAID-0 vs single drive test
http://faq.storagereview.com/SingleDriveVsRaid0 (2 driver RAID-0 is twice as fast as single drive) though it is the only thing that greatly benefits from going to RAID-0.
The Anand review also didn't really say "RAID-0 suxs by default":
There are some exceptions, especially if you are running a particular application that itself benefits considerably from a striped array, and obviously, our comments do not apply to server-class IO of any sort. But for the vast majority of desktop users and gamers alike, save your money and stay away from RAID-0.
Or Storagereview:
Again, RAID 0 does have its advantages in a handful of key applications and uses where data files are huge and/or data requests are highly sequential in nature. Data requests are not highly sequential, however, in typical desktop productivity and most gaming usage patterns, the most often cited in "Help me build my RAID 0!" posts.
Finetuning stripe and cluster size would improve the results for some benches but it would on the other hand also decrease the results for other benches, depending on wether they're STR dependant or for non-sequential I/O applications as explained in the stripe faq linked above.
I dunno if yer can get a lot more with any finetuning regarding non-sequential I/O applications (normal desktop usage), they're already using 128KB stripe size which is targeted at that usage and I don't think you can gain much using a different cluster size.
Your array seems to be more finetuned towards STR and benchmarks like HD Tach / WinBench 99.
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