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Trilarion: Good questions. I would like to add that I wonder what is the actual life expectancy of an SSD now?
It may depend on usage or manufacturing process.
Well, yeah, it does depend on the usage, that's pretty much the thing that's been known since the SSDs became a thing and apparently you can fill an entire SSD roughly 150 times before it is at serious risk of dying on you.

How long they work if barely used or how long they can hold data while being unpowered seems to be a rather controversial issue at this point. I saw an article that suggests that manufacturers do expect SSDs to lose data if unpowered for too long but there only seem to be rough estimates so far. They don't seem to be relevant to everyday users, though.

I have literally no idea, though, how long an SSD will work if use it regularly but not intensely in terms of writing operations. That's the biggest mystery about them, it seems.

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Trilarion: I think I remember there was a tool being able to readout hard discs and their failure management and the more failures you had the closer your hard disc was towards being dead.
Yes but - from what I understand - the problem with SSDs is that there's a tiny time frame between the first failures occurring and the whole drive dying down and that's exactly what's so scary about them compared to HDDs which tend to show their "fatigue" early enough to comfortably backup the data and replace the drive (although I myself once had an HDD die abruptly on me due to a head crash so I'm not saying that it's a rule).

SSD health is generally measured in the number of writing operations that have been performed on them in total (their firmware seems to keep track of that) and that alone seems to be enough to have a fair idea when you should replace an SSD.
Post edited May 23, 2017 by F4LL0UT
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JAAHAS: A small RAMdisk that can be loaded on the start before Windows reads/creates the pagefile seems to be the best solution, although that will in turn break the hibernation function.
I never even thought at that solution! I wonder if its viable. When I manage to get 32GB of RAM, a ramdisk shouldn't be a problem. I'll have to look into this.
I DO have 32 gigs and I moved my temp files to a 4 GB RAM disk.
Moving the pagefile will be my next step in the process.

But right now I am using imdisk, and it's dynamic RAM management also causes a huge memory leak. At the end of the day my memory can be filled up to the top.

What's a good (free) alternative which supports RAM disk over 1 GB?

Edit: I moved the page file now to my ram disk ... resulting in a error message at system startup. Apparently the RAM disk gets created AFTER Windows tries to create the page file. Is there a way to delay that process? Because I already run imdisk at system sartup with the SYSTEM user. so it SHOULD happen before I log in.
Post edited May 24, 2017 by neumi5694
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neumi5694: Apparently the RAM disk gets created AFTER Windows tries to create the page file.
Yes, that's why I was also mentioned i would be curious to know if it's possible.
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F4LL0UT: ... Yes but - from what I understand - the problem with SSDs is that there's a tiny time frame between the first failures occurring and the whole drive dying down and that's exactly what's so scary about them compared to HDDs which tend to show their "fatigue" early enough to comfortably backup the data and replace the drive (although I myself once had an HDD die abruptly on me due to a head crash so I'm not saying that it's a rule). ...
This suddenness of death also makes me nervous. The interesting thing is that I have a small SSD and a large HDD and the SSD is for the OS and installed software (so heavy activity) because the SSD has much faster random access and the HDD is for archiving (GOG games installers, ...), so I use the HDD much less intense. And there is an external HDD for backup in case the internal HDD dies.

The question is how long the SSD will still live with this heavy access and if it will die suddenly? If so, I will need to buy a new one and reinstall OS and software, which is manageable effort. A warning of imminent SSD death, if possible, would be important to me.


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neumi5694: ... I moved the page file now to my ram disk ... resulting in a error message at system startup. Apparently the RAM disk gets created AFTER Windows tries to create the page file. Is there a way to delay that process? Because I already run imdisk at system sartup with the SYSTEM user. so it SHOULD happen before I log in.
If you don't get an answer here, ask at https://superuser.com/, they typically know such things.
Post edited May 24, 2017 by Trilarion
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Trilarion: A warning of imminent SSD death, if possible, would be important to me.
Well, Samsung, for instance, provides a free tool called Samsung Magician that allows you to track the amount of data written to the drive so far and reports a "Drive Condition". It looks like this. Presumably there's similar software for drives by other manufacturers and apparently also some third-party software that supports drives by various manufacturers. I guess that's what you're looking for?
Well you can precisely check the amount of data written on any SSD using CrystalDiskInfo tool which is free to download.
So I wanted to make a tribute to my disk: sdssdh2256g

reading smart data by Power Shell command : Get-Disk | Get-StorageReliabilityCounter | fl

and it goes!

PowerOnHours : 42833
ReadErrorsCorrected : 8
ReadErrorsTotal : 8
ReadErrorsUncorrected :
ReadLatencyMax : 585
StartStopCycleCount :
StartStopCycleCountMax :
Temperature : 36


42833 hours = 1784 days = 4 years and 10 months constantly on! or having it for last 8 years

how is yours?