F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Fixing disk issues...

Fixing disk issues...

Fixing disk issues...

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Dreemurrz
Member
220
07-12-2016, 09:37 PM
#21
It allows reading the system partition yet the SSD remains nonfunctional. Continuing use might not be advisable. Current SSD manufacturers vary, so it’s not limited to Samsung alone.
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Dreemurrz
07-12-2016, 09:37 PM #21

It allows reading the system partition yet the SSD remains nonfunctional. Continuing use might not be advisable. Current SSD manufacturers vary, so it’s not limited to Samsung alone.

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REIKINGX
Member
71
07-14-2016, 05:22 AM
#22
Well you can try and check if the errors are due to the data corruption or an actual defective drive. Tbh when looking for SSDs m.2 ones are the way to go nowdays due to higher speeds and righer IOPS rate. It all depends how big and fast drive you want. I have found that adata SU630/SU650 tend to fail , also Kingston A400 series. Samsung is pricier , but should be more reliable long term. Also there is a bad trend of manufacturers launch their SSD series with one revision,. and months later they change physical components for cheaper ones. And they are all guilty of doing this atleast once. I use samsung ssds, and never had issues with them, Stay away from cheap adata, western digital blue, https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1...=906612217 Might also check with the sheet here and try find the model you looking to buy. stay away from red squares xD
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REIKINGX
07-14-2016, 05:22 AM #22

Well you can try and check if the errors are due to the data corruption or an actual defective drive. Tbh when looking for SSDs m.2 ones are the way to go nowdays due to higher speeds and righer IOPS rate. It all depends how big and fast drive you want. I have found that adata SU630/SU650 tend to fail , also Kingston A400 series. Samsung is pricier , but should be more reliable long term. Also there is a bad trend of manufacturers launch their SSD series with one revision,. and months later they change physical components for cheaper ones. And they are all guilty of doing this atleast once. I use samsung ssds, and never had issues with them, Stay away from cheap adata, western digital blue, https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1...=906612217 Might also check with the sheet here and try find the model you looking to buy. stay away from red squares xD

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eduardodd08
Posting Freak
852
07-25-2016, 05:47 AM
#23
I'm considering exploring NVME options. On my motherboard (B450 Tomahawk Max) with the M2 slot, two of my SATAs are turned off.
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eduardodd08
07-25-2016, 05:47 AM #23

I'm considering exploring NVME options. On my motherboard (B450 Tomahawk Max) with the M2 slot, two of my SATAs are turned off.

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Leaxer
Junior Member
47
07-26-2016, 12:22 PM
#24
Well if 4 sata ports are enough for you, id say go for m.2. Just check this comparison between a same price range SSDs, one 2.5in SATA and one m.2 ADATA SU750 ULTIMATE 512GB VS ADATA XPG GAMMIX S11 PRO 512GB M.2
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Leaxer
07-26-2016, 12:22 PM #24

Well if 4 sata ports are enough for you, id say go for m.2. Just check this comparison between a same price range SSDs, one 2.5in SATA and one m.2 ADATA SU750 ULTIMATE 512GB VS ADATA XPG GAMMIX S11 PRO 512GB M.2

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Pyroytic
Member
56
07-26-2016, 01:54 PM
#25
It seems to be a quick update. For Windows and standard desktop apps, it might not be necessary. Here are the findings from the chkdsk report.
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Pyroytic
07-26-2016, 01:54 PM #25

It seems to be a quick update. For Windows and standard desktop apps, it might not be necessary. Here are the findings from the chkdsk report.

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