Moderated by: chrisbet,
Very large scale study of hard drive failures (PDF)A very heavy read.  Rate Topic 
AuthorPost

Posted by Robert: Wed Jul 11th, 2012 07:26 1st Post
To save folks reading the entire PDF. My head still hurts!

SMART status reports are not to be relied upon. 'Good' SMART status drives can still fail...

High temperature and heavy usage are found not to correlate to failures. Infant (<3 months) and elderly (>5 years) drives appear to fail most.

http://static.googleusercontent.com/external_content/untrusted_dlcp/research.google.com/en//archive/disk_failures.pdf



____________________
Robert.



Posted by jk: Wed Jul 11th, 2012 07:36 2nd Post
Certainly agree with the statement.....Infant (5 years) drives appear to fail most.

I think the difference between makes is minor.



____________________
Still learning after all these years!
https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none


Posted by Squarerigger: Wed Jul 11th, 2012 07:53 3rd Post
Seems to be the norm in my experience with most electronic items I purchase. It either craps out right away and you replace under warranty. Or it lasts a long time. Very little in between time failures.

I think that is why extended warranties are not usually a good thing. If the item craps out early it is covered by the general warranty. If you get the extended warranty, and it craps out after 5 years or so, you would probably want to replace it anyway as technology will have past it several times over.

Extended warranties = the company is betting it will last and you are betting it won't.

Thanks Robert for sifting through all that information.



____________________
--------------------------------------------
Gary


Posted by Doug: Thu Jul 12th, 2012 11:03 4th Post
Bathtub Curve - Link



____________________
Recent & Popular posts
ProCapture | Genius on Demand Blog


Posted by Squarerigger: Thu Jul 12th, 2012 12:16 5th Post
Doug wrote:
Bathtub Curve - Link
:-O Thanks Doug! You had to go an dredge this up and wake up nightmares from my past. Suddenly I started thinking of MTBF (mean time between failures) and RAM ( reliability, availability, and maintainability) all terms I had hoped to never hear again. Sweat, sweat - trying to do RAM engineering studies and in my ancient days trying to schedule main frame computer times to run programs.

I need a drink :wine:



____________________
--------------------------------------------
Gary


Posted by jk: Thu Jul 12th, 2012 17:57 6th Post
:lol:
I thought that bath tub failure was a thing of the past, a quaint old concept like 'Great' Britain rather than United Kingdom. However maybe with Scotland angling for independence it should be dis-United Kingdom.

No tea and crumpets these days!



____________________
Still learning after all these years!
https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none

Reply
1st new
This is topic ID = 254  
Nikon DSLR Forums > Computer Hardware for Digital Photography. Computers, OS, Scanners, etc. > Hardware for Image Processing > Very large scale study of hard drive failures (PDF) Top

Users viewing this topic

Post quick reply

Current theme is Blue



A small amount of member data is captured and held in an attempt to reduce spammers and to manage users. This site also uses cookies to ensure ease of use. In order to comply with new DPR regulations you are required to agree/disagree with this process. If you do not agree then please email the Admins using info@nikondsl.uk Thank you.


Hosted by Octarine Services

UltraBB 1.173 Copyright © 2008-2024 Data 1 Systems
Page processed in 0.0750 seconds (71% database + 29% PHP). 62 queries executed.