Googling "SSD power failure" shows plenty of info on drives that become wiped, damaged or bricked with sudden power loss.
So far I have read a lot of valuable info here:
TR Forums ? View topic - SSDs and Sudden Power Failures
Darn, I wish I had read the above forum BEFORE I installed the SSD. It seems I could have set my PC to hibernate & this would have been a "safety feature" for my SSD. I always thought this was only an option on laptops.
I currently own the first laptop of my life. I have run PC's since the first version of Windows ~ so long ago I can't even recall what it was. XP has always been my favorite, then Windows 7. Buying a laptop was my best option until I got my PC up & running again after I broke a Seagate hard drive where the sata/data cable connects. No fixing that huge boo-boo!
I read the following statements online & am wondering what command to run or utility to perform when system won't even boot from SSD.
"The good news is, file system corruptions are typically not fatal since most operating systems will perform a file system repair operation on the next power up. Alternatively, a user can run a command or utility to perform the repair operation."
I need some help understanding these terms if anyone has time:
TRIM ~ as used in this sentence: The SSD potentially has some extra issues due to
TRIM or garbage collection, but it's really not much different than a conventional disk during a write operation or defrag operation. A complete brick of an SSD due to power loss is actually pretty rare and is usually due to firmware bugs.
RAM CACHING Ex 1: If you make use of the
ram caching feature from the EVO range and the power goes, anything in ram is susceptible to loss. Ex. 2: Just don't use
RAM caching. The EVOs are already fast.
Write-Cache Buffer Flushing: I think I had this enabled in Samsung Magician b/c it was recommended when using an SSD & HDD together. Doesn't look like it helped at all at this point.