As I have just had a crash from a 2.5" 1Tb Seagate HDD, that I was using quite intensely to download films & videos, I've started wondering on how reliable certain HDDs can be.
In this case, this HDD was housed on an external Welland box, so I wonder if heat dissipation was not an issue.
But I guess the power supply, coming through the USB cable, might not be an issue too.
It's not long since I bought that HDD, certainly less than a year, and I don't remember having an HDD that died so quickly. I will still send it to Seagate, if the warranty is valid, but doesn't solve the reliability problem.
My idea, at least for that application of downloading films & videos all day, is to go back to internal HDDs powered from the PC power supply, as I don't trust external boxes power supplies.
Am I exaggerating or do I have to try getting things to work reliably?
In this case, this HDD was housed on an external Welland box, so I wonder if heat dissipation was not an issue.
But I guess the power supply, coming through the USB cable, might not be an issue too.
It's not long since I bought that HDD, certainly less than a year, and I don't remember having an HDD that died so quickly. I will still send it to Seagate, if the warranty is valid, but doesn't solve the reliability problem.
My idea, at least for that application of downloading films & videos all day, is to go back to internal HDDs powered from the PC power supply, as I don't trust external boxes power supplies.
Am I exaggerating or do I have to try getting things to work reliably?