10 year old Intel motherboards had a hardware RAID integrated onto chipsetwhat would happen if its used?1) put 2x SATA HDD into SATA ports2) configure as mirror RAIDlets say the motherboard brakes down, what then?is the info on two drives recoverable with any other boards SATA connector? an AMD?or did the year 2013 Intel chipset connectors somehow mess around with a HDD format so that it cannot be read without the correct chipset?use PCI32bit Promise RAID controller card:>mirrored HDDs are readable as single drive when connected to any computer but of course it will afterwards say "corrupted" if you put it back in Promise and any data was written while elsewhereuse a Highpoint branded card:>mirrored HDDs readable anywherehowever 3ware branded RAID makes drives unreadable, will Intel do it too?
>>107875793My one and only experience with this was a mirror (RAID1) I had set up on an old sandy bridge Lenovo s30, using the Intel hardware raid. I built a new (Linux) PC (AMD coincidentally) and, at least initially, it would read the contents. I eventually decided ntfs in Linux bordered on self-harm and opted to reformat to ext4 and restored from backups and rebuilt the raid in mdadm.If id had the data striped across multiple disks I have no idea if I could have recreated the raid. I suspect it would be possible but beyond my skill.
>>107875793Intel to Intel is pretty much guaranteed to work.You can go from Z77 to Z890 with a RAID array and the new board will recognize it.Even further backwards is possible.