Hi all,
First thank you for hard work sharing that great tool. I am using the linux version of the tool and analyzing some ssd drives I have obtained these results:
Hard Disk Number : 0
Hard Disk Device : /dev/sg6
Interface : SCSI
Hard Disk Model ID : SanDisk DOPE1920S5xnNMRI
Firmware Revision : 3P0B
Hard Disk Serial Number : 0005515D3P0B3P0B6A40
Total Size : 1831420 MB
Current Temperature : 38 °C (100 °F)
Maximum Temperature (during Entire Lifespan) : 38 °C (100 °F)
Power On Time : 2065 days, 19 hours, 20 minutes (estimated)
Estimated Remaining Lifetime : 92 days
Lifetime Writes : 1.36 GB
Health : 92 % (Excellent)
Performance : 100 % (Excellent)
Hard Disk Number : 0
Hard Disk Device : /dev/sg79
Interface : SCSI
Hard Disk Model ID : SanDisk DOPE1920S5xnNMRI
Firmware Revision : 3P0B
Hard Disk Serial Number : 000472EE3P0B3P0B6A40
Total Size : 1831420 MB
Current Temperature : 41 °C (106 °F)
Maximum Temperature (during Entire Lifespan) : 41 °C (106 °F)
Power On Time : 2066 days, 17 hours, 42 minutes (estimated)
Estimated Remaining Lifetime : 91 days
Lifetime Writes : 2.46 GB
Health : 91 % (Excellent)
Performance : 100 % (Excellent)
Hard Disk Number : 0
Hard Disk Device : /dev/sg10
Interface : SCSI
Hard Disk Model ID : SanDisk DDYE1920S5xnNMRI
Firmware Revision : 3P03
Hard Disk Serial Number : A0417CB13P03P00E73F0
Total Size : 1831420 MB
Current Temperature : 43 °C (109 °F)
Maximum Temperature (during Entire Lifespan) : 43 °C (109 °F)
Power On Time : 824 days, 1 hours, 24 minutes (estimated)
Estimated Remaining Lifetime : more than 961 days
Lifetime Writes : 303.28 TB
Health : 98 % (Excellent)
Performance : 100 % (Excellent)
All drives are perfect but the health is not 100%. That depends of Power On Time? Why 2 drives with same power on time have differente health %.
Regards,
All ok but health is not 100%
- hdsentinel
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Re: All ok but health is not 100%
Thanks for your message.
In general, it is completely normal and expected that the Health of the SSD is lower than 100% due to wearout.
Please refer to:
https://www.hdsentinel.com/kb/category/16/solid-state-drives-ssds/why-my-ssd-shows-98-health-if-no-problems-reported.html
which explains the situation.
The text description (I do not see) usually confirms that.
Most newer SSDs internally calculate a such wear level based on the usage. Not only the power on time, but the amount of written data is more important. However, updating lots of smaller files /single sectors can cause much more wear than saving some larger files.
If you save a report file with -r command line switch and send to info (at) hdsentinel (dot) com address, I can see the complete status of the SSDs.
This may help to check/verify the situation because the Linux version may require update for some models.
In general, it is completely normal and expected that the Health of the SSD is lower than 100% due to wearout.
Please refer to:
https://www.hdsentinel.com/kb/category/16/solid-state-drives-ssds/why-my-ssd-shows-98-health-if-no-problems-reported.html
which explains the situation.
The text description (I do not see) usually confirms that.
Most newer SSDs internally calculate a such wear level based on the usage. Not only the power on time, but the amount of written data is more important. However, updating lots of smaller files /single sectors can cause much more wear than saving some larger files.
If you save a report file with -r command line switch and send to info (at) hdsentinel (dot) com address, I can see the complete status of the SSDs.
This may help to check/verify the situation because the Linux version may require update for some models.