RAID is a spectrum of technologies used to combine disks into sets for both speed and/or redundancy
RAID0 takes the data and spreads it across all drives - speed, but any failure takes out the volume. So it is less safe than a single drive.
RAID1 takes the data and writes two copies. It can survive one failure, but you lose half the capacity.
RAID10 = RAID0 + RAID1 - so you have two copies, but the individual copies are spread across multiple disks.
RAID5
RAID6
RAID50
RAID60
there are others, but less common.
-----Burton
50+ year / Life / Emeritus
ANA member (joined 12/1/1973)
Life member: Numismatics International, CONECA
Member: TNA, FtWCC, NETCC, EveryCountry (online) coin club
Owned by three cats and a wife of 40+ years (joined 1983)
Author: 3rd Edition of the Sample Slabs book,
https://www.sampleslabs.info/