Your hard drive is about to stop working soon.
Your hard drive is about to stop working soon.
Your HDD has been behaving oddly recently. It used to get corrupted after months of being idle, forcing you to format it. Now you're encountering an error message. After six years of use, is it typical for a hard disk to start failing so quickly?
This storage device was initially released in 2011, which could mean it's well over six years old. Seagates experienced reliability problems around that time, especially with 3TB models, though I think those issues were more common for those sizes. Still, it's happening now. Consider replacing it with a fresh 1TB SSD or HDD and clone the data before it gets damaged.
Make sure to move all your information to the new storage device right away.
I’ve only ever handled a few cases. Both mechanical and SSDs have their challenges. Some users run drives nonstop 24/7, and they seem to fail often. I’m not in that group. My limited exposure suggests a hard drive fails quickly once it starts acting up. I tried a freezer trick on one that was struggling and managed to recover the data. I’ve seen reports saying SSDs are meant to stay read-only, but I’m not sure if that’s accurate. I think their lifespan depends more on write frequency than time. The impact of time isn’t clear to me. For someone like me who doesn’t write much, SSDs can last a long time, while professionals might see faster degradation.