Running memtest once annually is generally safe and unlikely to harm hardware.
Running memtest once annually is generally safe and unlikely to harm hardware.
Hello everyone, We have numerous computers performing regular daily tests on newly released products. This continuous usage makes these machines quite busy. For our annual maintenance schedule, we plan to include several checks such as: running - chkdsk /f, sfc /scannow, Memtest86+ with at least one pass, Western Digital Data Lifeguard Diagnostic, and an extended HDD test to detect bad sectors and disk issues. I’ve been told that executing Memtest86 might lead to hardware failure or malfunction later. At this stage, I’m recommending replacing the HDD with an SSD wherever feasible. My concern is whether running Memtest could actually cause the hardware to fail. Best regards.
It only examines each RAM section individually to verify all addresses function properly. It inserts different sequences of zeros and ones into memory and then checks the data to confirm correct storage and retrieval. This process mirrors what computers perform routinely, but with greater thoroughness and completeness for error detection. Memtest doesn’t introduce any unique behavior that could harm hardware.
Thank you for your reply. I wasn't entirely confident it wouldn't affect any hardware.