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... than to speak and remove all doubt.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: ... than to speak and remove all doubt. She always reminds me to answer brief, and to only answer, not to speak.
Still I always manage to remove that doubt, even without speaking much
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Yes || No || Maybe - I like to cover all bases
modified 8-Dec-19 15:17pm.
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you are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Contrariwise, I'm in the Ice cream aisle.
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Keyboard not found?!
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I've been using a WD external spinner as a 'data drive' for the last 2 years. Up to now, it's worked great, mostly plugged into my main system, but also travelling with the laptop as needed...such as yesterday. This morning when plugging it in to my main system, Windows complains that it is unreadable or corrupted!
I'm now scanning it with Defender (going on 2 hours now) as a preliminary to trying anything else. The 'Estimated time remaining' got down to < 11 minutes (about an hour in) but has since been increasing as the number of files scans flies past 2.5M.
I intend to try chkdsk once the Defender scan is complete...if it ever does. (time remaining still climbing)
So, back to the subject line. Given the current price/GB, performance, and reliability of SSDs, I highly doubt that I will ever buy another spinner. Even if I'm able to recover the current drive, I don't trust it anymore and will be replacing it asap.
Question: Has anyone here actually experienced a failure with an SSD? Just last year, I retired my first one (64GB Patriot) after 5 years as a server OS drive, not due to failure, but as part of the server upgrade. Personally, I've not had any issues whatsoever with them.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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kmoorevs wrote: Question: Has anyone here actually experienced a failure with an SSD? Yo (Yes and No).
No because the laptop continues working as always, no performace lost, no error messages or whatever I would say it is having problems. Several checks successful, diagnostic tools found nothhing...
But yes, because I don't know why (and I have tested a lot of things) I can't do a successfull image anymore. I mean:
Same SSD has been in Lappie, since I gave it to my wife. I have done my standard procedure a couple of years (meaning... restore image once or twice a year, updating what needed to be updated and doing a new image to restore from next time). But somewhen some months ago... it stop restoring from the backups. I can do them, they are OK if I scan with the ghost emulator, but every try I have made to restore has been unsuccessfull.
I now sync the data partition with external drive every X days, but System partition is "in the wild mode"
Same SSD serie (a bigger model) is on my pc and nothing...
kmoorevs wrote: Up to now, it's worked great, mostly plugged into my main system, but also travelling with the laptop as needed...such as yesterday. This morning when plugging it in to my main system, Windows complains that it is unreadable or corrupted! I have had similar messages randomally after using the USB-Drives in other system.
Win 7 offers to "check", "restore" or "do nothing". I select "do nothing", save content to the pc, do a fast format... message is gone next time I plug the stick in.
With tiny USBs, no issue, with bigger ones I just keep hitting the "do nothing" until I have time, mood and space to move the content to another place so I can do a fast format.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Didn't Richard Nixon once store a short audio clip on one?
modified 8-Dec-19 14:20pm.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: Didn't Richard Nixon once store a short audio clip on one?
Not sure the drive would have the failure in that case!
BTW, I have HRC's private email server in my basement.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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A few ideas:
If you look for a reliable SSD, take a long hard look at the Samsung Pro series (not their EVO drives). The pro series make use of a slightly different technology, that is proprietary to Samsung as far as I know, and that is supposed to live longer than the regular SSD drives. They are, however, more expensive.
I have had two SSDs fail utterly over the past six or so years. They do not have an unlimited number of write cycles before failing, but I have never had a Samsung Pro fail on me.
I also firmly believe in WD Black drives for spinning disks, and had just a couple develop bad sectors over the years. However, you have a good chance of recovering most of the drive when you run chckdsk /r. I have never been able to recover a bad SSD in this way. When they die they die good!
Best of luck!
modified 8-Dec-19 13:49pm.
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Thanks, just the type info I was looking for.
Indeed, chkdsk /f recovered the drive and contents.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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kmoorevs wrote: Question: Has anyone here actually experienced a failure with an SSD? Not yet, but one of the three should be close to failing.
All three are mostly used for reading; installed applications on there. For data I use pendrives, attached to the router. Cheap and easy to replace, and the SSD's live longer if you don't write that often.
Still got a 1Tb spinner in the main machine - it's a gaming machine built by someone who is good at that stuff. The spinners work well in an environment that doesn't involve moving them. If it moves, you want a drive without moving parts.
Did not get the RAID-pendrives working yet. Once it does, it won't be very fast, since it is limited by a USB2 hub. In the end, that's where I want my data
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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kmoorevs wrote: Question: Has anyone here actually experienced a failure with an SSD? Yeah, my work laptop always had an SSD C drive and a HDD D drive.
When I quit my job I bought the laptop and it had to be formatted.
After that I only had a C drive, but I didn't think much of it (I just thought I had multiple partitions before, which were now removed to one big partition).
However, my laptop often failed to start after that and when it did it took minutes instead of the usual seconds.
Every morning was a struggle to start the laptop...
So I called Dell support and it turned out my old C was an SSD and my new C was the HDD.
The SSD got busted for some reason and never could be read after the format.
A Dell engineer replaced it (just within the warranty!) and I never had issues again.
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I've read the MTBF on SSDs was something like 20 years, but for HDDs it was only like 5.
When I was growin' up, I was the smartest kid I knew. Maybe that was just because I didn't know that many kids. All I know is now I feel the opposite.
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That would depend a lot on what you use them for.
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I'm sure it does. I think that was an average for consumer use.
When I was growin' up, I was the smartest kid I knew. Maybe that was just because I didn't know that many kids. All I know is now I feel the opposite.
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The problem is that they wear out in different ways.
For SSDs they should call it MWBF instead. (Mean Writes Before Failure)
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That's true but MTBF accounts for that in its own way. Obviously the causes are different, but failure is failure for the purposes of this. With modern tech, including advance wear leveling, you get about 20 years out of a drive before your writes fail.
When I was growin' up, I was the smartest kid I knew. Maybe that was just because I didn't know that many kids. All I know is now I feel the opposite.
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I believe the introduction of static wear levelling was the game changer for SSDs
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Next time, run chkdsk /f before defender. If you have bad sectors you want to mess with them as little as possible before taking an image.
In my experience, the upside with classic spinners is that they generally do warn you, before giving up for good. SSDs tend to just die without any warning at all.
This doesn't stop me from using them though, rather the opposite. But I still use classic spinners for long term storage and any type of transaction log.
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Quote: But I still use classic spinners for long term storage and any type of transaction log
Ditto! And for storing drive images in a normally disconnected drive.
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