this post was submitted on 08 Nov 2025
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Joke Conspiracies
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Scary. Do you have any protocols for HDD or to prolong their longevity, like a minimum or maximum powering frequency?
Not the person you asked, but heat is the killer of SSDs. As well as unplugged (unpowered) and hot room for bit-rot data loss.
Edit, just realized you said HDD. In that case avoid power cycles. Those are the major contributer to mechanical failure, and use q filesystem that repairs itself from bit-rot so you don't lose data.
I still have a 14 year old HDD that survived being spinning in a NAS for 10 years, SMART still is OK, but I am seeing bit-rot crop up in files so that now sits as a extra backup, should my good backup drives fail.
Interesting, I didn't know that; what temp should dormant SSDs be kept in? And by not power-cycling, do you mean to just keep HDDs on 24/7?
There is a white paper on SSD and heat popping the electrons out of there trapped memory spots. I will have to search it. But an unpowered SSD in 40C will start showing signs of data loss in a week, hotter temps and your a could be gone in a month.
HDD, yes run it always instead of stop start
I've done a quick search but have not located the science article yet, I will check later. However the ssd standards have this. The device should meet that, but as you can see if you had a hot closet in India your data could be gone in 3 weeks.
Per JESD218, a client class SSD must maintain its data integrity at the defined BER for only 500 hours at 52°C (less than 21 days) or 96 hours at 66°C (only four days).
Now that makes me wonder how long SSDs' data would last in freezing temps.