I discovered (by accident) that it is possible to have one drive formatted ext2 whilst the other is ext3. I had removed one drive in an ext2, RAID1 array and then formatted the remaining drive, first in ext2 and then ext3 and then replaced the "missing" drive to see if it would prompt for a format (it didn't).
Here are some read/write performance numbers using NASTester 0.4 - the test end-point is an IBM xSeries 206 server running Windows Server 2008 with 3 Seagate 250GB drives in a RAID5 array on an IBM ServeRAID 7t controller (a relabelled Adaptec 2410SA), 3GHz P4HT processor and 3 GB RAM, onboard Intel PRO1000CT configured for 9000 byte frames through a Netgear GS108T.
These tests are done by mapping a drive letter to each volume and then simply selecting the drive you wish to write to in NASTester, so no changes in hardware or configuration.
200MB file size ..
ext2 - writes at 19.59MB/sec average, reads at 14.66MB/sec
ext3 - writes at 14.69MB/sec average, reads at 14.63MB/sec
1000MB file size
ext2 - writes at 19.34MB/sec average, reads at 21.46MB/sec
ext3 - writes at 14.8MB/sec average, reads at 19.55MB/sec
2000MB file size
ext2 - writes at 7.43MB/sec, average reads at 22.13MB/sec
ext3 - writes at 6.55MB/sec, average, reads at 23.32MB/sec
I don't recall that significant a drop in write speed with a 2GB file size prior to 1.08
