Yes. Not only they are very difficult to recover, pretty much impossible at consumer grade level at any reasonable costs, but they can fail without any warning.SSDs should last ridiculously long. Iām looking at my WD Blue 1 TB SSD and Iām thinking at my current usage rate it would probably outlast me. Iāve had it for 3.5 years and reporting tools say itās still at 100% wear health. But the biggest problem isnāt going to be wear but some kind of corruption. If the wear level tables or the firmware borks, thatās pretty much impossible to recover.
Yes. Not only they are very difficult to recover, pretty much impossible at consumer grade level at any reasonable costs, but they can fail without any warning.
Mechanical HDDs have their faults, but they will usually give plenty of signals before total failure and are recoverable. I use mechanical drives for backup.
Keep in mind that this CAN cause issues on certain Mac/SSD combos including loss of data. I recommend a full backup before doing this.If you install an SSD in a Mac,
Go to āTerminalā, and type in āsudo trimforce enableā.
The advantage of the TRIM command is that it enables the SSDās GC (garbage collection) to skip the invalid data rather than moving it, thus saving time not rewriting the invalid data. This results in a reduction of the number of erase cycles on the flash memory and enables higher performance during writes. The SSD doesnāt need to immediately delete or garbage collect these locations it just marks them as no longer valid. This helps ensure that all storage cells are aged uniformly and maximum lifetime achieved.
I'm using "Crystal Disk Info" to monitor the 512GB SSD in my Dell laptop. The laptop is ~3 years old now, and the life remaining shows 88%. I haven't installed and removed any programs for over 2 years and just use it to do normal everyday things, mostly heavy internet use.SSD life is really of no concern IMO. Failures can happen and do happen, but thatās not the norm.
My old PC was 6-7 years old when I got rid of it. It had a Kingston SSD from day one. I had win7 on it, dual boot of windows 8. Dual boot of Ubuntu at one point. Then I moved to win10. It was formatted and reformatted multitude of times. All sorts of programs and games installed, uninstalled.
In other words, it got worked more than an average user would. I believe it was at either 98% or maybe 96%, after all of that.
There is no need to worry about using these as intended or trying to optimize them somehow. Unless one has some very specific tasks or requirements. For an average user, just plug it in and use it.
That would be SSDI, not SSD.I thought, for sure, you were talking about Social Security Disability AKA SSD in the title of this thread. I feel like I'm at the wrong place at the wrong time.![]()
I use Crystal Disk info too, but I used various other such programs and they all report the same thing. That's because it is the onboard drive controller that stores this data, so in your case the difference is due to the manufacturer and how they decide to count the life percentage.I'm using "Crystal Disk Info" to monitor the 512GB SSD in my Dell laptop. The laptop is ~3 years old now, and the life remaining shows 88%. I haven't installed and removed any programs for over 2 years and just use it to do normal everyday things, mostly heavy internet use.
It seems strange that you could do all that you described on your old PC and the SSD life was still at 96% after 6-7 years. Maybe different SSD monitoring software reports things differently? Is there a better SSD monitoring software beside Crystal Disk Info?
So my Dell SSD shows 88% remaining life after 19,725 GB of writes and 16,151 GB of reads. Does this look like that would equate to 88% life remaining? Reference post #1 for what it was at ~3 years ago.
View attachment 141891
Looks like that's a Lite-On drive but can't find any specs on TBW....generally though, 512gb SSD's are usually around 250-400 TBW for lifespan.I'm using "Crystal Disk Info" to monitor the 512GB SSD in my Dell laptop. The laptop is ~3 years old now, and the life remaining shows 88%. I haven't installed and removed any programs for over 2 years and just use it to do normal everyday things, mostly heavy internet use.
It seems strange that you could do all that you described on your old PC and the SSD life was still at 96% after 6-7 years. Maybe different SSD monitoring software reports things differently? Is there a better SSD monitoring software beside Crystal Disk Info?
So my Dell SSD shows 88% remaining life after 19,725 GB of writes and 16,151 GB of reads. Does this look like that would equate to 88% life remaining? Reference post #1 for what it was at ~3 years ago.
View attachment 141891
Is there anything always going on in the back ground in Win11 that would be writing data, or lots od SSD writing if tons of browsing tabs are opened in Firefox?
What about watching lots of YouTube? Is the SSD getting a workout that reduces the remaining life percentage?
What can eat into SSD life remaining % if someone isn't saving tons of files and writing to the drive much?
My 512GB SSD is at 88% (Crystal Disk) with 19TB written (ref post 27) in ~3 years. Seems like the life remaining % should be higher if with 19TB written.Anything like copying files, backing up, etc.
For comparison, my 970 Evo Plus 1TB drive that I've had for 2 years now as my main W11 OS drive: 16.9TB written and CrystalDiskInfo is showing 100% Good.
My 512GB SSD is at 88% (Crystal Disk) with 19TB written (ref post 27) in ~3 years. Seems like the life remaining % should be higher if with 19TB written.![]()
My 512GB SSD is at 92% with 125.8TB writtenMy 512GB SSD is at 88% (Crystal Disk) with 19TB written (ref post 27) in ~3 years. Seems like the life remaining % should be higher if with 19TB written.![]()
I have a WD in my Mac (the original hard drive) that has a warning for age, lol. But is otherwise healthy. It has 97,921 hours on it.I've got 72K+ hours on an SSD in one of my Linux machines...
![]()
Dang, my SSD must be low tier hardware. Thought Dell would use something better.My 512GB SSD is at 92% with 125.8TB written![]()