- Sep 7, 2001
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Everyone knows about the insanely high failure rate of the IBM Deskstar GXP hard drives from a few years ago.
I have a question though - if there is an IBM Deathstar that has been running OK for a few years now, is it as trustworthy as any other hard drive of it's age? Were all of the defective drives doomed to blow up, or would it be likely at all for one to hang on this long and blow in the near future?
I have a machine here at work with a deathstar in it that has been working great for quite a while. We are upgrading it and I"m wondering if it would be safe to use this drive for a little extra storage of non-critical files in another system ...
I have a question though - if there is an IBM Deathstar that has been running OK for a few years now, is it as trustworthy as any other hard drive of it's age? Were all of the defective drives doomed to blow up, or would it be likely at all for one to hang on this long and blow in the near future?
I have a machine here at work with a deathstar in it that has been working great for quite a while. We are upgrading it and I"m wondering if it would be safe to use this drive for a little extra storage of non-critical files in another system ...