Hi Rick,

> On Jan 13, 2016, at 14:36, Rick Leir <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi Spencer
> Yes, I heard that you get no warning, no smartd error counts or whatever. 
> Suddenly there is no response from your disk?

Yes. Unlike spinning rust which can grind (literally sometimes) for a bit 
longer and if you stick it in a freezer, that might extend it’s life long 
enough to get your data off, my SSDs failed within a few minutes. It’s been a 
few years so I forget the details. I’ve had both HDD and SSD fail while 
traveling so I always travel with a complete backup now.

SSDs compared to a HDD is like an endorphin rush, when all the sudden, your 
so-so 2 year old computer kicks ass. I stuck a older SSD into my rather average 
Dell desktop. It turned into a box which has a lot of “snap”.

One side note, just because I managed to pull data off a dying HDD was actually 
very dangerous. There was enough corrupted data that I am still cautious about 
the data which I recovered due to possible corruption. Only btrfs and ZFS do 
any data integrity checking to my knowledge and I wasn’t using either. My NAS 
now use ZFS.

Another caution about SSDs, they MUST be kept fairly cool or they will die of 
premature death. Heard via H/W friend about Micron admitting that. I try really 
hard to keep the mSATA SSDs under 50C in our systems ie. fans speed is keyed to 
SSD temperature, not CPU temperature.

I’ve had mSATA SSDs that runs slower and slower as the internal temperature 
increases and ended up with lots of errors by the time it got to 80C. Some form 
of cooling is required for SSDs. 2.5” SSDs are better than mSATA because they 
have more thermal mass. Samsung M.2 SSDs runs cooler than Micron mSATA SSDs. 

Regards,
Spencer
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