I think SSD disks are made to be used alone. MMTool is a program that allows you to view and modify the contents of ROM BIOS files. This tool will extract all modules from the ROM currently opened in MMTool, by controlling MMTools GUI. MMTool lacks an extract all feature, which can be useful to compare ROM files. I mean you start visual studio and it takes longer than without raid?!? You copy files from SSD to magnetic disk raid with 20 MB/s when you have a lot of files in your visual studio project. This tool controls AMI Aptio EFI MMTool, a tool used to edit AMI EFI ROMs. I think there is no advantage over non raid disk in real life (not benchmarks, which are useless in real case scenarios). This tool controls AMI Aptio EFI MMTool, a tool used to edit AMI EFI ROMs. On the other hand, you won't achieve the best performance in 4 kB read and write with raid0 unless you put strip size down to a block size of an SSD, but then the sequential read an write speeds are the same as non raid disk. As one of AMIs BIOS / UEFI utilities, MMTool allows users to. MMtool stands for Module Management Tool.
wtf? Why do you need sequential speeds up to 900 MB/s when you just can't use it (wherever you copy that file, that speed will go to waste). You can download ami aptio v uefi mmtool v for free. I have tried strip sizes from 16 kB to 128 kB, but the drive just does not behave as it is supposed to. Those disk drives are just not made for this kind of array. I have come to the conclusion, that SSD in RAID0 array just isn't useful.