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Okay to use SSD as only Drive?

Tags:
  • SSD
  • Disk Drive
  • Storage
  • Hard Drives
  • Solid State
Last response: in Storage
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August 12, 2014 8:56:33 PM

I don't have large storage needs and a 500gb SSD would be plenty. But is it your experience/recommendation to not use an SSD for all/only storage? Should a person definitely get a platter/spinning HDD for regular files (documents, photos, music)?

I was reading some of the comments on this article and there seems to be a big push towards that idea: http://lifehacker.com/5415355/do-you-really-need-more-than-4gb-of-ram

More about : ssd drive

a b G Storage
August 12, 2014 9:08:20 PM

It's fine, and many people do. If it's big enough to accommodate your storage needs, you don't need an HDD. It's just a cost effective way of having bulk storage for folks that have tons of stuff in their drives, but having SSD speed for their OS and applications.
August 12, 2014 9:14:05 PM

volcanoscout said:
It's fine, and many people do. If it's big enough to accommodate your storage needs, you don't need an HDD. It's just a cost effective way of having bulk storage for folks that have tons of stuff in their drives, but having SSD speed for their OS and applications.
So the SSD lifespan concerns that people talk about and the failing drives shouldn't be a concern?

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a b G Storage
August 12, 2014 9:21:42 PM

Normal workstation use is 10-20GB writes per day. For a quality SSD, like a Samsung 840 EVO, that's going to work out to something like 14-28 years of rated lifespan. If you really abuse it, you might shorten it to 7-10 years.

August 12, 2014 9:45:37 PM

volcanoscout said:
Normal workstation use is 10-20GB writes per day. For a quality SSD, like a Samsung 840 EVO, that's going to work out to something like 14-28 years of rated lifespan. If you really abuse it, you might shorten it to 7-10 years.
Thanks for the quick answers. I was actually about to purchase the 840 EVO before posting this question. I just got hungup on reading different things about the best way to setup a system. I think I'll pull the trigger now on the purchase of the 500gb SSD with piece of mind.
a b G Storage
August 13, 2014 4:39:09 AM

Sounds good. You'll still need to back your drive up, as you would with an HDD, as an SSD is not bullet-proof - it's subject to some of the same hazards as a regular spinning disk, like power surges, driver and firmware glitches, etc. There are no guarantees against failure, only warranties. Odds are long in favor of you moving on to your next PC and drive setup before you wear out a modern SSD through normal use.
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