It appears to work fine (it contains my home partition for my main machine I daily drive) and I haven’t noticed signs of failure. Not noticeably slow either. I used to boot Windows off of it once upon a time which was incredibly slow to start up, but I haven’t noticed slowness since using it for my home partition for my personal files.

Articles online seem to suggest the life expectancy for an HDD is 5–7 years. Should I be worried? How do I know when to get a new drive?

  • 🎨 Elaine Cortez 🇨🇦 @lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Always make sure that important files and folders are backed up at least twice! Even when drives are new, they can and do fail at random without warning. My HDD’s are the better half of a decade old and I had no issue with them at all until last year. They’re now starting to experience random corruptions that will sometimes compromise entire folders.

    • communism@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      I’ve not responded to the majority of comments in this thread because I’d have nothing to add except “thanks”, but here:

      They’re now starting to experience random corruptions that will sometimes compromise entire folders.

      Er why haven’t you bought new drives at that point??

      • ReadMoreBooks@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        Er why haven’t you bought new drives at that point??

        There’s different ways to arrange data on multiple physical drives. One group of ways is called RAID. One specific type of RAID is called RAID5. And, one can have 3 or more drives in the RAID5 array.

        I’ve 3 drives, each 2TB. In RAID5 I only get 4TB of effective storage (not 6TB). If any one of my 3 physical drives fails, the array preserves all data and continues to operate at a slower speed. The failed drive can be replaced, a rebuilding process performed, and performance restored. If a second drive fails then data is lost and the array stops working. But, even then, new drives can be purchased and data restored from backup.

        In a business we never want unplanned downtime because it’s costly. We’d be replace hard drives before they fail on a schedule we choose: planned downtime when no one is working. But, at home, particularly with backups, unplanned downtime often isn’t very costly. We can keep using our old hardware, maximizing its value, until it fails entirely.

      • 🎨 Elaine Cortez 🇨🇦 @lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        I’m gonna buy a new computer when this one inevitably refuses to boot up 🤷‍♀️ there’s more age related issues besides just the HDD’s at this point so it’ll be less hassle to start over.

    • communism@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      I’ve not responded to the majority of comments in this thread because I’d have nothing to add except “thanks”, but here:

      They’re now starting to experience random corruptions that will sometimes compromise entire folders.

      Er why haven’t you bought new drives at that point??

    • communism@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      I’ve not responded to the majority of comments in this thread because I’d have nothing to add except “thanks”, but here:

      They’re now starting to experience random corruptions that will sometimes compromise entire folders.

      Er why haven’t you bought new drives at that point??