![]() ![]() This is normal - and you do not need to worry about it now, as only 1% of the total lifetime used. This is completely independent from software, OS, restarts and so: as the amount of written data increases, the health slowly but surely decreases. If you want, you may check how that attribute changes with time on the S.M.A.R.T. This is what you can see in the text description area: there are no problems found, but the 173 Erase Count attribute determines the overall health of the device. If there are no further problems found, Hard Disk Sentinel reads these attributes which determine the complete health of the solid state device. The "wear-leveling" feature of the SSD tries to hide/minimise this effect but generally the SSD device reports the overall health of the memory cells by various attributes. Yes, the health is not 100%, "only" 99% - but it is still "EXCELLENT" see next to the health % bar.Īs you may know, the memory cells in solid state devices experience wear during each write operations and each cells tolerate only a limited number of overwrite passes. No, I can confirm that you do not need to worry.Īs the software displays the status is PERFECT, there are no problems with the SSD. ![]() (see the bottom of the page about SSD health) Not sure why you did not find the answer, as it is already discussed on the forum: I can confirm that it is completely normal and expected, nothing "can be done about this" (and nothing needs to be done). Thanks for the information and sorry for the confusion. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |