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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!ohstpy!garland
- From: garland@ohstpy.mps.ohio-state.edu
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Hard Disks: Toss them out when they break?
- Message-ID: <15642.2b625d73@ohstpy.mps.ohio-state.edu>
- Date: 24 Jan 93 09:12:19 EST
- Organization: The Ohio State University, Department of Physics
- Lines: 20
-
- I have about a dozen small computers in my labgroup, which we leave on 24 hours
- a day. We turn the monitors down when we're not using them, but otherwise leave
- everything on. We also blow the dust from the insides every year or so.
- Having done this for more than a decade, I find that the reliability is quite
- high, except for the fans in the power supplies (which tend to fail after three
- or four years), and the hard disk drives.
-
- The hard disks tend to last about three years before they start to go bad.
- Historically, we've just tossed them out and replaced them. We've not bothered
- with doing a low-level format or otherwise trying to restore them to health,
- the rationale being that the replacement costs are low and extracting another
- six months or so of life isn't worth the bother.
-
- I'd like to know if this is a sensible policy? What actually goes bad in the
- drive? If the bearings and mechanical parts are actually good for many years,
- then perhaps we're being wasteful by throwing them out and, instead,
- should just reformat them every few years and keep on using them? I've seen
- software adverstised that claims that we should do this, but I've no idea how
- good it really works? I'd sure appreciate any knowledgable advice. Thanks.
- Jim
-