I recently bought a box of 20 plus hard drives, a mixture of IDE and SATA.
I downloaded all the Drive Tools I could find from Seagate, Western Digital, Samsung, Hitachi and Maxtor.
The best tool by far was Seagate's Seatools for DOS. It evaluates any manufacturers drives, and allows error correction on Seagate (and Maxtors made by Seagate) drives.
Since WD and Samsung only evaluate defects, which Seatools does already, why bother?
At any rate the POH (powered on hours) was very interesting to me. Most of the drives had POH hours between 5000 and 18000. Some of the drives with unfixable media faults had hours as low as 1800. There were several newish drives with I guess bad logic boards as the drive was not detected at all. There were three or four newish drives with the "click of death", the heads refusing to park properly.
Fortunately there was a 750GB with less than 1000 hours, two 250GB drives with no faults, one Seagate 250GB with one error that I corrected, a working 160GB laptop SATA drive, and surprisingly a couple of those skinny Maxtor IDEs which had big hours but no faults.
What's your longevity record for consumer grade IDE and SATA drives.
I still trust SCSI, median average failure time 1.5 million hours!
Since there are only 8760 hours in a year isn't that 171 years?
I downloaded all the Drive Tools I could find from Seagate, Western Digital, Samsung, Hitachi and Maxtor.
The best tool by far was Seagate's Seatools for DOS. It evaluates any manufacturers drives, and allows error correction on Seagate (and Maxtors made by Seagate) drives.
Since WD and Samsung only evaluate defects, which Seatools does already, why bother?
At any rate the POH (powered on hours) was very interesting to me. Most of the drives had POH hours between 5000 and 18000. Some of the drives with unfixable media faults had hours as low as 1800. There were several newish drives with I guess bad logic boards as the drive was not detected at all. There were three or four newish drives with the "click of death", the heads refusing to park properly.
Fortunately there was a 750GB with less than 1000 hours, two 250GB drives with no faults, one Seagate 250GB with one error that I corrected, a working 160GB laptop SATA drive, and surprisingly a couple of those skinny Maxtor IDEs which had big hours but no faults.
What's your longevity record for consumer grade IDE and SATA drives.
I still trust SCSI, median average failure time 1.5 million hours!
Since there are only 8760 hours in a year isn't that 171 years?
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