Windows Can Cause Harm to Your Hardware During Reinstallation
Windows Can Cause Harm to Your Hardware During Reinstallation
Hey there, you built a new PC with a 3070Ti and an i9-10900K, 32GB RAM. You've installed Windows three times during setup—once on the day you built it and twice more in about two hours. You're super cautious about hardware damage and performance. Here are your questions: 1. Can reinstalling Windows too many times harm your hardware? 2. Would installing Windows 10 three times affect your system? 3. Is it safe to try reinstalling now because you're noticing input lag in your games?
I won’t damage anything… but this also doesn’t seem to help much. Reinstalling windows quickly won’t fix the problem. OS issues develop slowly, and many programs being added or removed often cause problems. If you’re having trouble, reformatting probably isn’t the answer. Are you experiencing input lag in your games? That’s usually the main reason for delays.
It seems you're sharing a snippet of conversation. Could you clarify what you'd like to do with it? I'm here to help with any questions or further actions you need.
It won't harm your SSD if you're using an SSD and writing data to it. It's secure, though it doesn't solve your issues.
Yes, technically it can cause wear on an SSD's NAND flash during OS data writing. That’s the main limitation. Beyond that, it doesn’t directly harm the hardware. So here’s the breakdown:
1. Yes, technically it can affect the SSD.
2. No, three times isn’t enough to noticeably shorten its lifespan.
3. Yes, but likely not the main cause of your problems.
The "damage" they mean is almost negligible over time. In practice, writing about 100GB across three installations is a very small amount. SSDs typically handle writes between 50 to 100+ TB for 250GB units. For instance, a 250GB SSD would need to be filled roughly 70% each day for a full year without interruption to reach its write endurance rating of around 70TB.
1-3 just means your OCD is going haywire. 1-2... it’s all in your head, similar to how driving a car damages it or writing wears a pencil. "Feeling" input lag? Or the actual measured lag? Know the difference—it matters. Your mind can trick you, but numbers stay true.