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#1
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Make it Stop
A connector, in the back of the computer, a little jiggling around
things, and do I really deserve all this? The HDD transfer issues, I thought heat related, were not. Uh-oh. Danger Will Rogers: HDD failure. Tracked it down, in Windows' reports, to a "page issue", an incessant slew of worsening errors. Page issue, though the swapfile wasn't per se mentioned - if it looks and walks like a duck - then it's probably the pagefile, then. Kicked in the HDD's SMART, too, I'd imagine where there weren't any errors, for a UDMA CRC firmware error condition. Which I have now. Sort of. Looked it over on the WEB -- sure why not -- let us commence to cleaning up connectors. Used a hard pen eraser to clean the HDD SATA connects and electrical parts cleaner to mate (reinsert a few times) the HDD's connection with a new locking SATA cable. That fixed it for back to smooth as silk data transfers. No more system glitches and wackiness due to the swap file on a partition to that particular drive. Annoying though. See you buy a car with a computer, and it kicks out a ROM code, maybe because you didn't change an air filter or top up the oil. You fix the condition, reset the car's memory chip, and merrily tool off to go about your business. A HDD sticks it in there. Permanently. Maybe an advertising gimmick, make you think imperfectly, look at that same reported error for the rest of the HDD's life. Maybe the HDD manufacturer thinks you'll get so tired of it, you'll buy another. Maybe because it's a "hard" drive it needs "hard" errors, too. Anyway, major code amber didn't escalate into red-alarm security data issue, once I'd stuck that HDD into a docking station for better electrical connections and watched it perform flawless. Keep your and cables and HDD contacts clean if your computer HDD activity light stays on too long and programs turn weird. |
#2
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Make it Stop
W dniu 2019-04-16 oÂ*19:31, Flasherly pisze:
A connector, in the back of the computer, a little jiggling around things, and do I really deserve all this? The HDD transfer issues, I thought heat related, were not. Uh-oh. Danger Will Rogers: HDD failure. Tracked it down, in Windows' reports, to a "page issue", an incessant slew of worsening errors. Page issue, though the swapfile wasn't per se mentioned - if it looks and walks like a duck - then it's probably the pagefile, then. Kicked in the HDD's SMART, too, I'd imagine where there weren't any errors, for a UDMA CRC firmware error condition. Which I have now. Sort of. Looked it over on the WEB -- sure why not -- let us commence to cleaning up connectors. Used a hard pen eraser to clean the HDD SATA connects and electrical parts cleaner to mate (reinsert a few times) the HDD's connection with a new locking SATA cable. That fixed it for back to smooth as silk data transfers. No more system glitches and wackiness due to the swap file on a partition to that particular drive. Annoying though. See you buy a car with a computer, and it kicks out a ROM code, maybe because you didn't change an air filter or top up the oil. You fix the condition, reset the car's memory chip, and merrily tool off to go about your business. A HDD sticks it in there. Permanently. Maybe an advertising gimmick, make you think imperfectly, look at that same reported error for the rest of the HDD's life. Maybe the HDD manufacturer thinks you'll get so tired of it, you'll buy another. Maybe because it's a "hard" drive it needs "hard" errors, too. Anyway, major code amber didn't escalate into red-alarm security data issue, once I'd stuck that HDD into a docking station for better electrical connections and watched it perform flawless. Keep your and cables and HDD contacts clean if your computer HDD activity light stays on too long and programs turn weird. Low HDD temperature is the biggest MYTH of computer world. Temperature of your HDD should be quite high but not too high. Cold drives tend to fail more often than drives who are kept around 50 degrees Celsius (sometimes even higher) can fail less much less often. -- Filip454 ] |
#3
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Make it Stop
On Wed, 17 Apr 2019 00:10:40 +0200, Filip454
wrote: Low HDD temperature is the biggest MYTH of computer world. Temperature of your HDD should be quite high but not too high. Cold drives tend to fail more often than drives who are kept around 50 degrees Celsius (sometimes even higher) can fail less much less often. 50*9/5 90+32 122 I don't personally like them that hot, although 115+F occasionally does "happen" in the hot summers without A/C. 110F, under 110F and over 95F is to my liking. It's the only fans I actually bother with since the equally mythical dawn, I suppose, of a PC revolution. For me PC cases are now one step above, in the convenience department, a plywood breadboard with some nails in it to "strap up" a PC. CPU fan. Fans go in contained PWR SUPPLY and still decent but hot CPUs. They're the foremost obvious and above, for the one and only case fan, in front of the HDD rack array, I personally wouldn't operate without. Never been a big fan of failing drives, either, whether or not they're left in right toasty to crispy to grab aholt. Win some, lose some: that's what a fanatic is. I stuck with Seagates, early $300 RRL 30Gs, up until Maxtor's heyday contracts with the U.S. Dept. of Navy, few IBMs, still cycling into some large T-byte class cheap Saumsungs from the pre-typhoon devastation that hit the Pacific Rim manufacturing facilities. Leaving Seagate and Western Digital's mainstream, as they've been all along, among offerings as well these days. I pretty much now favor a latter popularity to a rocksolid 5400 WD. For a personal matrix, then, what I'm looking for is 10 years HDD life expectancy. That's the better sort of luck, than not, I feel I have had overall with HDD. Right tickles my fancy, it does, when drives up and decide to last that long. (I've probably also owned enough failed drives to hope the good memories aren't too biased against what would have went, over time, over the shoulder.) All that's left is up and coming larger capacity SSDs, an alternative aspect, in their own right, to pure 2T+ drives with some time now, a few years, to report improved reliability in select industry sectors, with new physical platter tracking methodology employed for up to a likes of 8T and a few 12T's. They occasionally do as well surface for absurd sale prices, closer than not to $100, to be wondrous considerations of sheer bulk capacity. Not that I've studied them extensively enough for a better bias towards a purchase;- I'm just kinda idling along, eyeballing the $50-ish 512G SDD offerings. Might switch for some study time with larger platter sizes and an aim to make killing a monstrosity a worthy endeavor to attempt among better buys. |
#4
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Make it Stop
On Tue, 16 Apr 2019 23:13:54 -0400, Flasherly
wrote: Seagates, early $300 RRL 30Gs, - Correction: Those were 30 megabyte RLLs, or earliest entries for home PC enthusiast's budget, ensuing after a more prohibitive MFM 20 megabyte hard disk, possibly $500. People ran programs from out of a boxful of floppies with two 360Ks, and a RF converter for outputing monochrome into a 5" portable TeeVee;- They were staunch supporters of a coke-a-cola(tm) eye-glass industry on global networks predating the WWW. An RLL was plenty big for 5 or 10 megabyte of pre-Zip, LHA or ARJ, all-night verification efforts promoted by a command switch, to do a checksum on the integrity of the compressed programs, at 5 mega-hertz with an 8088, NEC V20 or 30 (6 mega-hertz). Once they were cold, a field computer box with an inverted keyboard for a lid, was taken was out of the back of a pick-up bed in the dead of winter, it had to warm up for half an hour. The RLL platters needed to expand to room temperature to match the head-travel tolerance to tracks at a temperature they were formerly written. |
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