Wondering about temperatures during surface test
Posted: 2021.02.01. 07:51
Hello,
I routinely run the surface test on my 2TB external drives to double-check that everything's okay, and it's quite common for my drives to hit temperatures around 49°C while the test is running. My drives are more than 50% full, so the test can sometimes take almost 4 hours to finish...and for 2½ of those hours, temperatures hover around 49°C. Now, my external drives are WD, and from what I understand they can sometimes read a few degrees higher than their actual temperatures...but my question is: how many hours can an external drive sustain 49°C before it becomes an issue? Surely 2½ hours during a test is not enough to overheat things so much that its lifespan is irreversibly shortened, correct?
Besides routine usual surface tests (which I've only run about 5 or 6 times in the past), my drives never reach anything higher than the late 30s or so. For reference, when I first connect them to my PC, they're usually around 23°C before I start the test. Like I said, everything's fine with my drives...I'm just wondering if high temperatures are considered more or less safe as long as they do not progress past yellow. Obviously, once they hit the red zone, that's bad...but according to everything I've read, as long as it's not higher than 50°C, everything should be fine. It's surprisingly difficult to find any definitive material regarding the effects of internal heat on external HDDs, just a lot of anecdotal stuff. Again, my drives only hit temps of 49°C or so during tests, and that's only for 2½ hours before they eventually cool down.
It's probably a dumb question, but as I've said: I have no idea how many hours of heat are considered dangerous.
I routinely run the surface test on my 2TB external drives to double-check that everything's okay, and it's quite common for my drives to hit temperatures around 49°C while the test is running. My drives are more than 50% full, so the test can sometimes take almost 4 hours to finish...and for 2½ of those hours, temperatures hover around 49°C. Now, my external drives are WD, and from what I understand they can sometimes read a few degrees higher than their actual temperatures...but my question is: how many hours can an external drive sustain 49°C before it becomes an issue? Surely 2½ hours during a test is not enough to overheat things so much that its lifespan is irreversibly shortened, correct?
Besides routine usual surface tests (which I've only run about 5 or 6 times in the past), my drives never reach anything higher than the late 30s or so. For reference, when I first connect them to my PC, they're usually around 23°C before I start the test. Like I said, everything's fine with my drives...I'm just wondering if high temperatures are considered more or less safe as long as they do not progress past yellow. Obviously, once they hit the red zone, that's bad...but according to everything I've read, as long as it's not higher than 50°C, everything should be fine. It's surprisingly difficult to find any definitive material regarding the effects of internal heat on external HDDs, just a lot of anecdotal stuff. Again, my drives only hit temps of 49°C or so during tests, and that's only for 2½ hours before they eventually cool down.
It's probably a dumb question, but as I've said: I have no idea how many hours of heat are considered dangerous.