Windows has that 'turn off hard disk after' power saving option, and it would be good to have the mechanical drives spin down when not in use.
Actually, that is probably the best way to kill your drives in a shorter time.
That's a cop-out by mfgs, designed to deny warranty claims.Also, I don't think standard consumer drives are built to be running 24/7 - in fact I think I even read that in a disclaimer once. These are not enterprise drives, they're Samsung F3s and WD Caviar SE16s.
They say that the majority of bearing wear happens during spin up.
Why would it wake them up unless a scan is scheduled?
Actually, that is probably the best way to kill your drives in a shorter time.
I see this statement all the time, but every bit of evidence I've read points to head crashes as the major cause of drive failure. Other problems down the list are heat, dust, power surge, jarring, water, and so on. I have never seen spinup listed. I think it's an urban legend.
I let my drives spin down. Heat is kind of high on the list!
Actually, that is probably the best way to kill your drives in a shorter time.
How did you deal with the random idle drive access issue I mentioned before? What services do you have to disable to stop Windows from spinning them up every 5 minutes?
