drccsc wrote:
They may have thought you were insisting on having the original drive itself repaired and returned to you in working condition. If that's the case then no, I'd say that's not normal.
But having it cloned? I can't understand why anyone would have a problem with that.
I think it was just because I was talking to people who had no technical knowledge and were just reading a script.
Okay, so say that the drive can be cloned to another drive of the exact same size, block-for-block. Will I be able to swap it for the original drive in the two-drive RAID 0 array that I had? In other words, will the RAID controller realize that it's not the original drive (maybe by looking at serial numbers), and refuse to use it? It's an Intel integrated RAID controller.
(For those that have asked, it is recognized by motherboard BIOS (and spins up, I think). In the Intel Matrix Storage Manager BIOS screen, the model and serial number are still listed under Physical Drives, but under Status, it says "Error occurred".)