06-07-2008, 21:13 | #1 |
Goes up to 11!
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 4,577
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S.M.A.R.T errors
Well one of my Seagate 500gb's has just decided to die. I had noticed late last night that one of the hdds wasn't sounding very healthy but there were no smart errors so I just ignored it. Just booted into windows and it seems in its very last screams of life it threw a smart error
Maybe I understood smart wrong but I thought that a hdd would give more warning than just buggering up that quickly. ie more of a degradation. I suppose the extra noise was a warning, but odd that nothing was reported? I do have to say that the intel storage manager on the new motherboards is damn good. A big improvement over the nvidia raid that was on the Nforce models. I'm more miffed that its only a few months old. |
06-07-2008, 21:26 | #2 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
Posts: 15,194
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S.M.A.R.T. is a guide, and nothing more. It's only good for gradually-occurring failures like bad sectors or calibration issues. Sudden mechanical failures, head crashes etc., though rarer, aren't going to cause S.M.A.R.T. errors until it is too late.
I've had a disk where the head servo died suddenly about a month after I installed it. That one locked up the drive electronics and the IDE card as well (I have an IDE RAID card in my server). First I knew about it was when the system stopped responding. Luckily it was on a RAID-1 array and I had a cold spare to hand. Last edited by Mark; 06-07-2008 at 21:29. |
06-07-2008, 22:32 | #3 |
Goes up to 11!
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 4,577
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Hmmm, interesting. I was thinking that although there was something mechanical dieing that more errors would be thrown. Not really an issue as I have a replacement on order and the remaining raid disk is backed up
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