User preference I guess. It just dosen't feel right to intentionally pull disks out of a RAID configuration. It's like pulling a carpet from underneath a table with all your fine china on. I guess it's not so bad if you are not running an array. But even so, I'd much rather keep my disks stored safe in what is a fairly robost enclosure and attach an external drive. Removes the risk or loosing a disk, wearing out connectors, static on the circuitry, magnetic interference, inserting in the wrong slot, formatting the wrong drive, dropping it, etc.
First - if I might be permitted to point out - my earlier post specifically suggests that disk not be removed from a RAID configuration - nevertheless - speaking as one who has on countless occasions, simply yanked disks out of a RAID array, there is no harm in it,
provided that the connectors were designed to support hot removal, which by the way SATA connectors are. The process is no more traumatic (to the array and the data contained therein) than if a disk had failed.
To compare this to a table with your fine china - well - if the table had been designed to withstand the carpet being yanked in the same way as a RAID array is designed to withstand a disk failure - there would probably be no harm in that either.
All of the other issues you raised are either non issues or user preference.
- wearing out the connectors, static on the circuitry - as mentioned earlier, the SATA connectos are designed to cope with this.
- magnetic interference - not only is the disk already in an enclosure that shields it from external magnetic fields, the enclosure also contains some of the strongest permanent magnets known to man, and shields external objects from those fields.
- loosing and/or dropping the disk - that can happen with an external enclosure
- inserting it in the wrong slot - you do have to take some care in what you do, don't you? Is this any more difficult that connecting the wrong external drive to a USB connector?
Take a look at my earlier post - one of the devices I mentioned was the Imation Odyssey - this is nothing more than a laptop SATA drive in a plastic case, that you insert into a "dock" - essentially a USB-SATA interface, that connects to the host computer via USB.
I'm talking about a successful commercially available product from one of the leading manufacturers in magnetic media, with all but one of your perceived shortcomings - it really is not that challenging or dangerous.