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Looking for most reliable SSD

Asparagus

Senior member
Recently had a 240 GB Crucial M500 die on me and I need to replace. I'd like to have something comparable in speed and price ($150) with a bias to reliability... An thoughts?

I was assuming cruicial is one of the most reliable drives... :|
 
Sometimes you can have just bad luck.

I have a crucial M550 256GB (only for 4 months now) but it is fast and work reliable. I had a very rare power outage a few weeks ago and my pc did survive, windows did not came up with an error on my ssd and hdd.

Model : Crucial_CT256M550SSD1
Firmware : MU01
Interface : Serial ATA
Major Version : ACS-2
Minor Version : ATA8-ACS version 6
Transfer Mode : SATA/600 | SATA/600
Power On Hours : 414 hours
Power On Count : 165 count
Host Writes : 453 GB
Wear Level Count : 2
Temperature : 27 C (80 F)
Health Status : Good (100 %)

Half of the host writes can be attributed to installation of OS and the many, many updates i had to do which also went wrong a few times, causing rollbacks before i finally got all updates to install correctly.
 
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Recently had a 240 GB Crucial M500 die on me and I need to replace. I'd like to have something comparable in speed and price ($150) with a bias to reliability... An thoughts?

I was assuming cruicial is one of the most reliable drives... :|

Are you sure you need to spend money on it? Is it under warranty/RMA'able?
 
Intel SSD's have been the most reliable I have found. I have installed about 80 of them over the last 4 years...all the models with 5 yr warranty. Only had 2 bad ones...each one was good out of the box, and started to fail around the year mark...but I was still able to clone over to replacement SSD. Also, Intel tech support was great to deal with for replacement under warranty.
 
Recently had a 240 GB Crucial M500 die on me and I need to replace. I'd like to have something comparable in speed and price ($150) with a bias to reliability... An thoughts?

I was assuming cruicial is one of the most reliable drives... :|

You didn't finish answering the questions in your other thread.
You can't assume your crucial is dead.
 
Intel SSD's have been the most reliable I have found. I have installed about 80 of them over the last 4 years...all the models with 5 yr warranty. Only had 2 bad ones...each one was good out of the box, and started to fail around the year mark...but I was still able to clone over to replacement SSD. Also, Intel tech support was great to deal with for replacement under warranty.
What Intel models where the ones that gone bad ?
 
my vote intel!

however crucial has paired up with intel.... so i guess crucial is in that list as well.

But i still have a X25-E i use as a temp drive which is still going on strong, and i have hammered that sucker to kingdom come..
But its a SLC drive so i guess u cant really count that in this thread.
 
Recently had a 240 GB Crucial M500 die on me and I need to replace. I'd like to have something comparable in speed and price ($150) with a bias to reliability... An thoughts?

I was assuming cruicial is one of the most reliable drives... :|
How did it die? As of the last thread, it seemed alive.
 
What Intel models where the ones that gone bad ?
I vaguely remember a FW bug that would turn some X25-Ms into 8GB flash drives.

The more recent Intel consumer models are Sandforce drives, with all the unfair baggage that comes with. (The latest firmware works fine. Really!)

The mostest-recent models based on Intel's own controller are kinda expensive. But they work darn well.
 
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Reliability is not just write endurance.

Most of the SSDs dies in sudden cases which the controllers face a bug and can't jump over it then close itself.

I believe the enterprise based drives are better solution. You can pick some Intel 710 or DC S3500 if you find in acceptable price.
 
Buy an older MLC drive like the Samsung 830 or Plextor M3. They have been proven to be rock-solid over time. Yet most people believe newer equals better, so you can find them at great prices.
 
Buy an older MLC drive like the Samsung 830 or Plextor M3. They have been proven to be rock-solid over time. Yet most people believe newer equals better, so you can find them at great prices.

Wat

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Unless something new has happened, my vote is still on re-using the old drive, because it never seemed like a drive problem to begin with.
 
The most reliable drive is the one that is backed up the most often...

🙂

Having said that, I backed up my boot HDD (a Seagate 7200.12), fairly aggressively which I still had to replace at 4 years old. I think a failing drive might look for the weak spot in one's backup strategy and attempt to exploit it 🙂

I've bought a few Crucial M4s for customers and probably ~20x Samsung 840 PROs (and a few 850 PROs), no problems yet.
 
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