Your SSD health may be “Good,” but disk write errors mean you should start worrying sooner
Many people rightly believe that panicking about SSD lifespan is pointless, since most PCs will never write enough data to a drive to exhaust its endurance. If you check your SSD's health with CrystalDiskInfo or a first-party tool, you'll probably see "Good" or "Normal" under "Drive Health." You'll probably see the same status for years, irrespective of what's going on physically with the NAND flash on your drive. SSD health is just a percentage that tells you how much of the drive's rated lifespan has been exhausted. It doesn't account for serious read/write errors or physical degradation of the SSD's cells. Even an SSD with 99% or 95% health could have encountered uncorrectable errors, at which point it should not be trusted with your data anymore. A deeper look at your drive's S.M.A.R.T. data will tell you if you need to start preparing for the last rites.
Many people rightly believe that panicking about SSD lifespan is pointless, since most PCs will never write enough data to a drive to exhaust its endurance. If you check your SSD’s health with CrystalDiskInfo or a first-party tool, you’ll probably see “Good” or “Normal” under “Drive Health.” You’ll probably see the same status for years, irrespective of what’s going on physically with the NAND flash on your drive. SSD health is just a percentage that tells you how much of the drive’s rated lifespan has been exhausted. It doesn’t account for serious read/write errors or physical degradation of the SSD’s cells. Even an SSD with 99% or 95% health could have encountered uncorrectable errors, at which point it should not be trusted with your data anymore. A deeper look at your drive’s S.M.A.R.T. data will tell you if you need to start preparing for the last rites.
Jane Smith
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Published by: aplhsindia.in
