- Joined
- Oct 15, 2011
- Messages
- 2,489 (0.52/day)
- Location
- Springfield, Vermont
System Name | KHR-1 |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9 5900X |
Motherboard | ASRock B550 PG Velocita (UEFI-BIOS P3.40) |
Memory | 32 GB G.Skill RipJawsV F4-3200C16D-32GVR |
Video Card(s) | Sparkle Titan Arc A770 16 GB |
Storage | Western Digital Black SN850 1 TB NVMe SSD |
Display(s) | Alienware AW3423DWF OLED-ASRock PG27Q15R2A (backup) |
Case | Corsair 275R |
Audio Device(s) | Technics SA-EX140 receiver with Polk VT60 speakers |
Power Supply | eVGA Supernova G3 750W |
Mouse | Logitech G Pro (Hero) |
Software | Windows 11 Pro x64 23H2 |
I saw an HDD reach 60 C before, IIRC, and not seem to damage anything. Sure, if it was for super long periods, I expect it to have a short life, especially if that's the intake air temp!I've got 3 remaining 1TB HDD's from WD that I use for storage in my PC I did have 4 until the repurposed 2TB Apple HDD (Seagate 2TB with a [Cr)apple firmware installed) suddenly decided it was not going to work right anymore
Looking at it's smart readings it had somehow reached 60 degrees celsius and cooked something as it took 4.5 days just to copy off 365GB of Audio books off of it
pretty shitty of it if you ask me seeing as none of the HDD's around it got as high as 45c
But I have an HDD somewhere where I suspect there's a faulty sensor. And somehow, the HDD is not nearly slow as that!
Your bad HDD, likely has a PCB-level fault. I saw a Seagate with the SMART going bonkers! It's in the other room. The ECC error rate attribute, keeps going up and down!
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