
“If I never install another application and just go about my business, my drive has 203.4GB of space to spread out those 7GB of writes per day. That means in roughly 29 days my SSD, if it wear levels perfectly, I will have written to every single available flash block on my drive. Tack on another 7 days if the drive is smart enough to move my static data around to wear level even more properly. So we’re at approximately 36 days before I exhaust one out of my ~10,000 write cycles. Multiply that out and it would take 360,000 days of using my machine for all of my NAND to wear out; once again, assuming perfect wear leveling. That’s 986 years. Your NAND flash cells will actually lose their charge well before that time comes, in about 10 years.”Here are some more Storage reviews from around the web:
- OCZ Vertex 3 Pro SandForce SF-2582 200GB SSD Preview @ Legit Reviews
- Western Digital Scorpio Black 750GB 2.5″ Hard Drive Review @ Hardware Canucks
- SSD for PCI-Express: OCZ IBIS vs. OCZ RevoDrive @ X-bit Labs
- Thermaltake Max 5G USB 3.0 External Hard Drive Enclosure Review @ ThinkComputers
- Zalman ZM-VE200 External 2.5-inch HDD Enclosure with Virtual Drive Function Review @Hi Tech Legion
- Icy Dock MB662USEB-2S @ HardwareBistro
- Synology DiskStation DS211 Network Attached Storage Device @ X-bit Labs