Wyndru
Diamond Member
- Apr 9, 2009
- 7,318
- 4
- 76
Over the last few months I have lost a little confidence in SSD's. I've had 2 m4's with the 5200 hour bug, (because the firmware wasn't updated even though I asked the users to bring them to me to have them updated) and I also had a samsung 830 die, and 2 corsair's.
What concerns me is that SSD's die without any warning, and you can't get data off of them. At least with the mechanical drives sometimes you could get back into them in a pre-installation os and grab some data off before they fully stop working. When an SSD dies, that's it. No warning sounds coming from the drive, no flakey OS performance to give you a heads up, it just stops working completely out of the blue and you can't access it.
I'm happy with the performance, but I don't trust it for critical storage. I won't be installing them on laptops anymore unless the user has some form of backup in place. I don't like telling people all of their pictures documents or videos are gone. I very rarely had to do that with mechanical drives (maybe 4 or 5 times in 10 years), and already I've seen it 3 times in 1 year with SSD's.
What concerns me is that SSD's die without any warning, and you can't get data off of them. At least with the mechanical drives sometimes you could get back into them in a pre-installation os and grab some data off before they fully stop working. When an SSD dies, that's it. No warning sounds coming from the drive, no flakey OS performance to give you a heads up, it just stops working completely out of the blue and you can't access it.
I'm happy with the performance, but I don't trust it for critical storage. I won't be installing them on laptops anymore unless the user has some form of backup in place. I don't like telling people all of their pictures documents or videos are gone. I very rarely had to do that with mechanical drives (maybe 4 or 5 times in 10 years), and already I've seen it 3 times in 1 year with SSD's.