What is the Best Hard Drive?

Brink

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It was one year ago that I first blogged about the failure rates of specific models of hard drives, so now is a good time for an update.

At Backblaze, as of December 31, 2014, we had 41,213 disk drives spinning in our data center, storing all of the data for our unlimited backup service. That is up from 27,134 at the end of 2013. This year, most of the new drives are 4 TB drives, and a few are the new 6 TB drives.

Read more: https://www.backblaze.com/blog/best-hard-drive/
 

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Very interesting.

The only thing that is in question to me is can the results of the test be verified by other large volume hard drive users?

So my questions to you Shawn.

With all the forums how many hard drives are use and what size and brands?
What is the failure rate of each brand and size?

Or possibly are all the major storage done in a Cloud?

Just curious.

I also wonder what kind of hard drives companies like Microsoft, Google, and Amazon use.
It is hard for me to conceive the amount storage such companies have.

Storage capabilities of such governments agencies as N.S.A. is mind boggling.
 

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Hey Jack,

I have two Samsung HD154UI 1TB HDDs that have been extremely reliable for me over the years.

The OCZ Vector SSD has been great for me as well so far over the last 2 years.

John will need to answer about the server drives though.
 

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Something to keep in mind is that Backblaze has a business plan that is unique among large volume HDD users so finding another large volume HDD user that is comparable to Backblaze. Instead of using expensive, high quality enterprise grade HDDs like pretty much everyone else in the mass data storage business uses to avoid frequent HDD replacements, Backblaze uses inexpensive (and downright cheap), consumer grade HDDs, including ones cannibalized from external HDDs, the theory being it costs less to use cheaper HDDs and replace them more frequently instead of more expensive HDDs that don't need as frequent replacement. so far, that business plan seems to be working for them.

Even though Backblaze is using consumer drives in a way they were never intended to be used (running 24/7 instead no more than 8 hours a day), it's report on HDD reliability is still useful to consumers since it shows a very general comparison of how well one brand of HDD stacks up to another as far as HDD life is concerned. What the test doesn't show is that some brands of HDDs have changed ownership over the time of the test (HGST, for example), which may or may not have an effect on future HDD reliability, the cost of HDDs over time (an example is Seagates may fail more frequently than WDs but Seagates cost considerably less than WDs), length of warranty (WD is king, followed by HGST, then Seagate), the quality level of customer service when making a warranty claim (WD beats the holy, hairy heck out of Seagate here, and the tier of the HDDs used (Backblaze use the lowest priced HDDs it can lay its hands on so higher tier HDDs aren't being compared), etc.

Because of the factors I just mentioned, the comparisons have to be generalized, meaning the differences between HGST and WD are insignificant since they are so close to each other but, since Seagate is so far more dramatically different from the other two, it is worth noting. What means more to me is warranty length (suggest better reliability) and customer service levels. One can glean that information from customer reviews. One must read the reviews themselves, however, rather than just the number of stars, eggs, or whatever, to weed out the ones from people who are clueless, reporting a HDD is wonderful after a whole day of operation, complaining of DOAs that could be due to poor shipping, etc. I prefer WDs over Seagates based on my personal experience (however, personal experience vary from person to person), warranty length, and customer service levels on warranty claims (WD beats the snot out of Seagate, based mostly on customer reviews and partially on my own experience).
 

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Yeah, Seagates are not very reliable. I had 2 drives fail on me. My 4 OCZs (Vertex and Vector) work great too - the oldest since 2008. The spinning external disk I trust the most is my 2.5" Fujitsu. That thing has taken so much beating and never failed - knock on wood.
 

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I'm a low end user. Having said that I have never had a problem with Seagate or WD. hard drives.
I don't use hard drives much any more but also haven't had any problems with Intel or Samsung SSD's. Other than the price I don't know why someone using and having the need for hundreds of hard drives wouldn't buy enterprise hard drives.

Backblaze needing that many hard drives indicates they have a lot of data stored that is accessed often. That data has to be valuable to someone. Why would such a company not buy the best enterprise hard drives they could get. Yes I know they cost more but what is all that data worth.
 

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I've never had a 2.5" HDD fail on me and I have both Seagates and WDs. I've had two 3.5" Seagates fail on me (the infamous 7200.11s, the only 3.5" Seagates I've ever owned) and three WDs (I've owned far more WDs than Seagates).

The first WD to fail was one an early Green (1.5TB) a supposedly reputable computer shop installed in an older machine of mine to replace the two Seagates that previously failed (the shop should have known better than to use a green drive for a one drive machine; that experience was the reason why I learned how to build and maintain my own machines). The early Greens had an issue with excessive head parking that caused them to wear out prematurely and has since been corrected.

The second bad WD was a 4TB Black that arrived DOA. I don't really count that one since it could have been damaged in shipping (I worked Shipping and Receiving off and on for 32 years so I know first hand how poorly packages get handled); the vendor promptly replaced it with another new drive that is working just fine now.

The third WD was a 2 TB Green that started throwing SMART errors (over 300 reallocated sectors). While the drive was still working just fine and was receiving extremely light usage (I only use Greens for backups and install only Blacks in my desktop machine), it was approaching the end of its warranty so I contacted WD. They promptly replaced it with no hassle, allowing me to have it cross shipped (I had to provide a credit card number to guarantee I would return the old drive after I received the replacement).

WD's longer warranties and excellent customer service, not to mention the long time between failures (I have 12 of their 3.5" drives right now) has convinced me to stay with WD, even though they are more expensive. That said, the best drive I ever had was a 60GB Maxtor. That little jewel lasted me seven years, running 24/7 about half of the time. I only retired it because I retired the computer it was in, it was too small, and it was IDE.
 

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...Backblaze needing that many hard drives indicates they have a lot of data stored that is accessed often. That data has to be valuable to someone. Why would such a company not buy the best enterprise hard drives they could get. Yes I know they cost more but what is all that data worth.

Keep in mind data farms like Backblaze run their drives in RAIDed servers so, when a drive fails, data isn't lost and all they have to do is pop in another drive and let the RAID rebuild itself. In fact, considering how many failures they do have, I wouldn't doubt that Backblaze uses hot spares in their servers to allow more time to pop in the replacements.

Apparently, Backblaze has found that replacing cheaper drives more frequently is more cost effective than replacing more expensive drives less frequently, especially since they have been doing it for quite a while.
 

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How well documented is the notion that "enterprise" drives are more reliable than "consumer" drives?

Failure rates per se, with no reference to warranty, customer service, total cost of ownership, etc.
 

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System: Crucial MX100 series SSD, 128 GB;
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How well documented is the notion that "enterprise" drives are more reliable than "consumer" drives?

Failure rates per se, with no reference to warranty, customer service, total cost of ownership, etc.

Just based on customer reviews, I would say they enterprise drives are no better than consumer drives for lifespan, despite costing more. Keep in mind, however, most consumers don't run their consumer drives 24/7 (like someone I know :o ) and enterprise drives are designed for 24/7 operation.
 

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Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7-3930K
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MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2GB 256-bit GDDR
Sound Card
Asus Xonar Essence STX
Monitor(s) Displays
3x Asus VG248QE 24", Vizio 32" TV
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080, ?
Hard Drives
Samsung 128GB 840 Pro SSD (1),
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (4)
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (16) external backup drives used in 2.5" hot swap bays in the computer.
PSU
Corsair HX750w
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Antec Two Hundred v2 (modified)
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Cooler Master GeminII S524 120mm (fan replaced with a 140mm)
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Logitech G510s
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Logitech M525 (two in use)
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=< 32Mbps down, 8Mbps up
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AVAST!, MBAM, SAS, Spybot S&D (all but MBAM free) Glary Util
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IE11
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LSI 9211-8i HBA card (8 SATA III ports), 2.5" & 3.5" Hot Swap Bays, HooToo HT-CR001 PCI-E to USB 3.0 Internal Hub + 6 Slot Card Reader, and LG Model CH12LS28 BD-ROM Optical Drive. Also, ScanSnap S1500 ADF duplexing scanner, Canon 9000F flat bed scanner, Corsair SP2500 2.1 speakers, Samsung CLP 415nw laser color printer, Cyberpower PP2200SW UPS
I have 5 Seagate 1TBs in operation on 3 PCs spanning 2-5 years and none failed or developed any reallocated sectors. One is close to 12,000 power on hours. (Famous last words maybe but I hope not). Note that I stuck with 1 TB for internals not higher capacity HDDs which the study focuses on.
I think overheating is the worst enemy for any HDD apart from dropping them :)

Listening to "evidence" I buy WDs now.
 

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How well documented is the notion that "enterprise" drives are more reliable than "consumer" drives?

Failure rates per se, with no reference to warranty, customer service, total cost of ownership, etc.

Just based on customer reviews, I would say they enterprise drives are no better than consumer drives for lifespan, despite costing more. Keep in mind, however, most consumers don't run their consumer drives 24/7 (like someone I know :o ) and enterprise drives are designed for 24/7 operation.

Hmmmm.....................


Lifespan as measured in days owned? Hours of operation with discs spinning at full speed? Start/stop count or some other SMART metric?

I'm wondering what "designed for 24/7 operation" means in the real world.

If it didn't ultimately translate to a lower chance of failure per X hours of operation it would have no importance to me at all.

I'm aware of that study Google did regarding their own drives maybe 10 years ago. I think I still have the PDF. But it's outdated now.

You'd think there would be some well-established and documented dollars and cents reason why an enterprise would buy "enterprise" drives.

The reason may have nothing at all to do with failure rates and instead may amount to hand-holding, longer warranties, expedited customer service, etc. This is my suspicion until and unless I can find a study which points to different failure rates per X hours of operation.

I dunno, just asking.
 

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Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bitIntel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)none; graphics are integrated on CPU
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Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
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Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
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Intel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked
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AsRock Z170M Extreme 4, micro ATX
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8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)
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Sound Card
onboard: Realtek ALC1150; external: USB Behringer UF0-202
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell S2340M 23 inch IPS
Screen Resolution
1600 x 900
Hard Drives
System: Crucial MX100 series SSD, 128 GB;
Data: Samsung Spinpoint 103SJ, 1 TB;
Backup: WD Caviar Green WD30EZRX-00D8PB0, 3 TB
PSU
Rosewill SilentNight 500 watt fanless, semi-modular
Case
Antec Solo II
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12S; Noctua F12 intake, Noctua S12A exhaust
Keyboard
Microsoft 200 6JH-00001 USB
Mouse
Dell or Microsoft optical wired; USB
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes Premium
Browser
Pale Moon
Other Info
All fans PWM; speeds at idle: CPU circa 500 rpm; intake circa 600 rpm; exhaust circa 600 rpm; CPU temps 27 idle and 47 C load in a warm room (27 C/81 F) when running Intel Extreme Tuning Utility stress test.
So my questions to you Shawn.

With all the forums how many hard drives are use and what size and brands?
What is the failure rate of each brand and size?

WEB1 (SF/EF/VF)
4 x 200GB Smart XceedIOPS SSD riad10

WEB3 (TF/PCHF and others)
4x 960GB SanDisk CloudSpeed 1000 SSD raid10

With the current two front facing web servers above so far there has been no failures, the previous server that SF was on did lose an SSD a couple of years back wiping a full days data.
 

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Thanks John for the information.

Looking I noticed you bought Enterprise level SSD's.
Until I looked up what you posted I had not even heard of those SSD's.
Price per gig is high but that is the price you pay for reliability.

For some reason I thought you would need more GB's for all the storage needed for all the forums. Goes to show how much I don't know about Enterprise anything.

For my home use I lean to Intel which are never the fasted ssd's on the consumer market but have a great reports on reliability.

I just picked up a couple of Intel 730 series 240 gb because at the time they were priced right. Haven't used them yet. They probably won't break any ssd speed records either. It's hard for me to stop using Intel products because they just keep working as they should so I don't have to worry about them.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 10 Pro. 64/ version 1709 Windows 7 Pr...Intel i7-6800K @ 4.3Corsair Platinum 16 gig @2400EVGA GTX 1070 OC
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home made Desktop
OS
Windows 10 Pro. 64/ version 1709 Windows 7 Pro/64
CPU
Intel i7-6800K @ 4.3
Motherboard
ASUS X-99 Deluxe II
Memory
Corsair Platinum 16 gig @2400
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA GTX 1070 OC
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus 27" LED LCD/VE278Q
Screen Resolution
1920-1080 or 1280-720 HDMI
Hard Drives
INTEL SSD 730-240 Gb Sata 3.0/
PSU
EVGA Platium 1200W
Case
Phanteks Luxe Tempered Glass 8 fans/ one radiator
Cooling
XSPC/ Water Cooled CPU
Keyboard
Das 4 Professional
Mouse
Logitech M705/MX Anywhere 2-S
Internet Speed
100 mbits
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials/ Malwarebytes Premium 3.0/ SAS
Browser
I.E. 11 default/Firefox/ ISP Time Warner Cable/Spectrum
Other Info
LG BluRay Burner/
Sound system-KLipsch-THX/
Icy Dock ssd Hot Swap bays.
The first WD to fail was one an early Green (1.5TB) a supposedly reputable computer shop installed in an older machine of mine to replace the two Seagates that previously failed (the shop should have known better than to use a green drive for a one drive machine; that experience was the reason why I learned how to build and maintain my own machines). The early Greens had an issue with excessive head parking that caused them to wear out prematurely and has since been corrected.
The WD Green HDDs are still set to 8 second parking. :shock:

Worse unlike the older models (EARS) the timer cannot be disabled in the new models (EZRX).
The best you can do is set them to use 300 second parking.

I disabled the timer in my older WD Green 1.5 TB and WD 2 TB HDDs.
The 1.5 TB HDD had already racked up 10s of thousands of parks by the time I heard of the issue. :(

I couldn't disable the timer in my WD Green 2 TB EZRX HDD and I actually emailed WD about this.
Their reply indicated that the timer in new WD Green EZRX HDDs couldn't be disabled.
I had to set the HDDs to 300 seconds.

The 1.5 TB EARS HDD has racked up >1200 days of Power-On Hours. :)

The 2 TB EARS HDD started playing up (~April last year, just before the warranty expired) and I removed it when I rebuilt my system last month.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

W7 Ultimate SP1, LM19.2 MATE, W10 Home 1703, ...AMD Phenom II x6 1100T, 3.3 GHz12GB DDR3 1333 G-Skill (4GB x 2), G-Skill (2G...NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
n/a
OS
W7 Ultimate SP1, LM19.2 MATE, W10 Home 1703, W10 Pro 1703 VM, #All 64 bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II x6 1100T, 3.3 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS M4A88T-M/USB3 (AM3)
Memory
12GB DDR3 1333 G-Skill (4GB x 2), G-Skill (2GB x 2)
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660
Sound Card
Realtek?
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung S23B350
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
WD Green 2TB (SATA), WD Green 3TB (SATA), WD Blue 4TB (SATA), WD Blue 6TB (SATA)
PSU
Cooler Master
Case
Antec GX300 Tower
Cooling
3x Antec TRICOOL 120mm Fans
Mouse
Wired Optical
Internet Speed
DSL
Antivirus
Avast
Browser
Pale Moon (64 bit)
Other Info
2018-12-27 Upgraded HDDs
2015-12-10 Upgraded case, graphics card, storage
2015-08-15 Upgraded motherboard & RAM
2015-07-15 Upgraded LM17.1 to LM17.2
The first WD to fail was one an early Green (1.5TB) a supposedly reputable computer shop installed in an older machine of mine to replace the two Seagates that previously failed (the shop should have known better than to use a green drive for a one drive machine; that experience was the reason why I learned how to build and maintain my own machines). The early Greens had an issue with excessive head parking that caused them to wear out prematurely and has since been corrected.
The WD Green HDDs are still set to 8 second parking. :shock:...

True. They are designed to park the heads and spin down when not in use to reduce power consumption. That, along with the slower top rpm, is what makes them green. The problem with the early Greens was the heads would park, then unpark, then repeat that cycle continuously until they reached their maximum cycle rating; they would fail shortly after that. As I said before, that was fixed a long time ago. It's also one reason why these drives are unsuitable for use as a boot drive; too much on and off activity. However, they are suited for pure storage. Since my computer runs 24/7, I prefer to use a higher quality drive for storage in it—the WD Blacks—especially since they have a longer warranty.

However, I use them for my backup drives. I plug them into the 3.5" hot swap bay in my computer, let them spin up and index, then fire up my backup program (FreeFileSync). When the backup is finished, I wait a bit for the heads to park and the drive to spin down (roughly ten seconds seems to be plenty), then pull the drive out of the swap bay and put it away.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 Ultimate 64 bitIntel i7-3930KKingston HyperX Genesis 32GB Kit (8x4GB Modul...MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2...
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7-3930K
Motherboard
ASUS P9X79 WS
Memory
Kingston HyperX Genesis 32GB Kit (8x4GB Modules) 1600MHz DDR
Graphics Card(s)
MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2GB 256-bit GDDR
Sound Card
Asus Xonar Essence STX
Monitor(s) Displays
3x Asus VG248QE 24", Vizio 32" TV
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080, ?
Hard Drives
Samsung 128GB 840 Pro SSD (1),
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (4)
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (16) external backup drives used in 2.5" hot swap bays in the computer.
PSU
Corsair HX750w
Case
Antec Two Hundred v2 (modified)
Cooling
Cooler Master GeminII S524 120mm (fan replaced with a 140mm)
Keyboard
Logitech G510s
Mouse
Logitech M525 (two in use)
Internet Speed
=< 32Mbps down, 8Mbps up
Antivirus
AVAST!, MBAM, SAS, Spybot S&D (all but MBAM free) Glary Util
Browser
IE11
Other Info
LSI 9211-8i HBA card (8 SATA III ports), 2.5" & 3.5" Hot Swap Bays, HooToo HT-CR001 PCI-E to USB 3.0 Internal Hub + 6 Slot Card Reader, and LG Model CH12LS28 BD-ROM Optical Drive. Also, ScanSnap S1500 ADF duplexing scanner, Canon 9000F flat bed scanner, Corsair SP2500 2.1 speakers, Samsung CLP 415nw laser color printer, Cyberpower PP2200SW UPS
The WD Green HDDs are still set to 8 second parking. :shock:

This may be true, but I'm not sure it's significant.

Here's my experience:

I have a 7 month old WD Green 3 TB WD30EZRX-00D8PB0. Three platters, manufactured in Thailand.

Power on hours: 3344; in operation pretty much when I’m awake, 15 or 16 hours a day.

I do not use sleep or similar settings. Other than my monitor, stuff is either on or off.

Load/Unload cycle count: 3488, about once per hour. I’ve tracked this since installation and it’s steady at about that rate---on a schedule for maybe 6000 per year given 15 or 16 hours a day of operation. The drives are rated for several hundred thousand cycles.

I did run the Wdidle3 app and it said head parking was set to 8 seconds. I am aware of the s/300 switch. I did not even attempt to change settings, leaving it at 8 seconds.

In spite of what Wdidle3 says, it appears my drive heads are not parking every 8 seconds. About once per hour.

Or do you refer to some metric other than load/unload cycle (LLC)?

Or do you not believe the LLC count as reported?

Or?

I know that some earlier WD drives would reach 100,000 LLC count within weeks, sometimes after behaving properly for months.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bitIntel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)none; graphics are integrated on CPU
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
CPU
Intel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked
Motherboard
AsRock Z170M Extreme 4, micro ATX
Memory
8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)
Graphics Card(s)
none; graphics are integrated on CPU
Sound Card
onboard: Realtek ALC1150; external: USB Behringer UF0-202
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell S2340M 23 inch IPS
Screen Resolution
1600 x 900
Hard Drives
System: Crucial MX100 series SSD, 128 GB;
Data: Samsung Spinpoint 103SJ, 1 TB;
Backup: WD Caviar Green WD30EZRX-00D8PB0, 3 TB
PSU
Rosewill SilentNight 500 watt fanless, semi-modular
Case
Antec Solo II
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12S; Noctua F12 intake, Noctua S12A exhaust
Keyboard
Microsoft 200 6JH-00001 USB
Mouse
Dell or Microsoft optical wired; USB
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes Premium
Browser
Pale Moon
Other Info
All fans PWM; speeds at idle: CPU circa 500 rpm; intake circa 600 rpm; exhaust circa 600 rpm; CPU temps 27 idle and 47 C load in a warm room (27 C/81 F) when running Intel Extreme Tuning Utility stress test.
They aren't designed to park every 8 seconds. They are designed to park 8 seconds after they become inactive.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 Ultimate 64 bitIntel i7-3930KKingston HyperX Genesis 32GB Kit (8x4GB Modul...MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2...
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7-3930K
Motherboard
ASUS P9X79 WS
Memory
Kingston HyperX Genesis 32GB Kit (8x4GB Modules) 1600MHz DDR
Graphics Card(s)
MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2GB 256-bit GDDR
Sound Card
Asus Xonar Essence STX
Monitor(s) Displays
3x Asus VG248QE 24", Vizio 32" TV
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080, ?
Hard Drives
Samsung 128GB 840 Pro SSD (1),
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (4)
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (16) external backup drives used in 2.5" hot swap bays in the computer.
PSU
Corsair HX750w
Case
Antec Two Hundred v2 (modified)
Cooling
Cooler Master GeminII S524 120mm (fan replaced with a 140mm)
Keyboard
Logitech G510s
Mouse
Logitech M525 (two in use)
Internet Speed
=< 32Mbps down, 8Mbps up
Antivirus
AVAST!, MBAM, SAS, Spybot S&D (all but MBAM free) Glary Util
Browser
IE11
Other Info
LSI 9211-8i HBA card (8 SATA III ports), 2.5" & 3.5" Hot Swap Bays, HooToo HT-CR001 PCI-E to USB 3.0 Internal Hub + 6 Slot Card Reader, and LG Model CH12LS28 BD-ROM Optical Drive. Also, ScanSnap S1500 ADF duplexing scanner, Canon 9000F flat bed scanner, Corsair SP2500 2.1 speakers, Samsung CLP 415nw laser color printer, Cyberpower PP2200SW UPS
They aren't designed to park every 8 seconds. They are designed to park 8 seconds after they become inactive.

What does "inactive" mean in that context?

Heads not spinning?

Not overtly accessed as when opening a file through Windows Explorer?

Powered off?
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bitIntel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)none; graphics are integrated on CPU
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
CPU
Intel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked
Motherboard
AsRock Z170M Extreme 4, micro ATX
Memory
8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)
Graphics Card(s)
none; graphics are integrated on CPU
Sound Card
onboard: Realtek ALC1150; external: USB Behringer UF0-202
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell S2340M 23 inch IPS
Screen Resolution
1600 x 900
Hard Drives
System: Crucial MX100 series SSD, 128 GB;
Data: Samsung Spinpoint 103SJ, 1 TB;
Backup: WD Caviar Green WD30EZRX-00D8PB0, 3 TB
PSU
Rosewill SilentNight 500 watt fanless, semi-modular
Case
Antec Solo II
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12S; Noctua F12 intake, Noctua S12A exhaust
Keyboard
Microsoft 200 6JH-00001 USB
Mouse
Dell or Microsoft optical wired; USB
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes Premium
Browser
Pale Moon
Other Info
All fans PWM; speeds at idle: CPU circa 500 rpm; intake circa 600 rpm; exhaust circa 600 rpm; CPU temps 27 idle and 47 C load in a warm room (27 C/81 F) when running Intel Extreme Tuning Utility stress test.
They aren't designed to park every 8 seconds. They are designed to park 8 seconds after they become inactive.

What does "inactive" mean in that context?

Heads not spinning?

Not overtly accessed as when opening a file through Windows Explorer?

Powered off?

Not overtly accessed as when opening a file through Windows Explorer.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 Ultimate 64 bitIntel i7-3930KKingston HyperX Genesis 32GB Kit (8x4GB Modul...MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2...
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7-3930K
Motherboard
ASUS P9X79 WS
Memory
Kingston HyperX Genesis 32GB Kit (8x4GB Modules) 1600MHz DDR
Graphics Card(s)
MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2GB 256-bit GDDR
Sound Card
Asus Xonar Essence STX
Monitor(s) Displays
3x Asus VG248QE 24", Vizio 32" TV
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080, ?
Hard Drives
Samsung 128GB 840 Pro SSD (1),
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (4)
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (16) external backup drives used in 2.5" hot swap bays in the computer.
PSU
Corsair HX750w
Case
Antec Two Hundred v2 (modified)
Cooling
Cooler Master GeminII S524 120mm (fan replaced with a 140mm)
Keyboard
Logitech G510s
Mouse
Logitech M525 (two in use)
Internet Speed
=< 32Mbps down, 8Mbps up
Antivirus
AVAST!, MBAM, SAS, Spybot S&D (all but MBAM free) Glary Util
Browser
IE11
Other Info
LSI 9211-8i HBA card (8 SATA III ports), 2.5" & 3.5" Hot Swap Bays, HooToo HT-CR001 PCI-E to USB 3.0 Internal Hub + 6 Slot Card Reader, and LG Model CH12LS28 BD-ROM Optical Drive. Also, ScanSnap S1500 ADF duplexing scanner, Canon 9000F flat bed scanner, Corsair SP2500 2.1 speakers, Samsung CLP 415nw laser color printer, Cyberpower PP2200SW UPS
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