When it comes to raw power there is nothing to beat the dual-bay Taurus. Available in the classic Pleiades design, the Taurus is built strong and rugged, offering more than enough capacity to store all your digital media files. Not only that, the Taurus RAID II can also back up and secure all of your data thanks to RAID protection. Great performance, great protection and great looks – only in the Taurus.
Massive Storage
The Taurus is designed to house up to two 3.5" SATA hard drives with the option to setup your drives and combine them as one single drive or as two individual drives. They are mounted to the enclosure with a silicone rubber ring to prevent vibration and reduce noise. The ON/OFF switch and LED status indication are located conveniently at the front of the enclosure for easy access and good visibility.

RAID Mode Selector
The Taurus comes with a RAID mode selector switch to easily setup your drives. To increase performance and data throughput, the "RAID 0 - Striping" setup will be ideal for your daily backup and other data transfers. For important data and reliability, the "RAID 1 - Mirroring" setup will be the best solution, automatically creating a copy of all the data in case one of the drives fails. To keep your drives cool, the Taurus is using a smart fan. It automatically regulates fan speed according to the internal temperature. This function plus the silicone rubber feet not only optimises cooling but also reduces the noise level!

| RAID Setup |
| Note: Changing the RAID setup will require you to re-format the drives. Make sure you backup all data before doing so! |
| Nr. 0 |
Non-RAID The drives will show up as two independent drives. Use this if you have only installed one drive or two different drives (not the same capacity and brand). |
| Nr. 1 |
JBOD The two drives show up as one large single drive. Spanning is an array (not RAID) that is written sequentially across the two drives. By itself, it does not provide any performance or redundancy benefits. Use this if you have installed two drives and prefer them to appear as one large drive. |
| Nr. 2 |
RAID 0 - Striping * Used where speed is the primary objective, RAID Level 0 (also called striping) is not redundant. This form of array splits each piece of data across both of the drives in segments; since data is written without any form of parity data-checking, it allows for the fastest data transfer of all other modes. However, if one drive becomes damaged, the whole array can become corrupted. |
| Nr. 3 |
RAID 1 - Mirroring * This mode requires 2 identical drives to implement. RAID 1 creates an exact copy (or mirror) of a set of data on the second drive. This is useful when reliability and backup are more important than data capacity. The available capacity to the user will only be as large as a single drive but when one of the hard drives fails, it can be replaced and the data rebuilt automatically. |
| Remarks |
* For RAID 0 & 1, two hard hard drives of identical capacity and make are required! |