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ati
10-02-05, 05:20 PM
http://kevincat.no-ip.org/hosting/Mine/Misc/SMART.JPG
:shrug:

Nexus Realized
10-02-05, 05:25 PM
S.M.A.R.T. stands for Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology. S.M.A.R.T. technology was developed by a number of major hard disk drive manufacturers in a concerted effort to increase the reliability of drives. It is a technology that enables the PC to predict the future failure of hard disk drives.

dicecca112
10-02-05, 05:26 PM
S.M.A.R.T. technology

S.M.A.R.T. stands for Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology. S.M.A.R.T. technology was developed by a number of major hard disk drive manufacturers in a concerted effort to increase the reliability of drives. It is a technology that enables the PC to predict the future failure of hard disk drives. S.M.A.R.T. technology has become an industry standard for hard drive manufacturers.

Through the S.M.A.R.T. system, modern hard disk drives incorporate a suite of advanced diagnostics that monitor the internal operations of a drive and provide an early warning for many types of potential problems. When a potential problem is detected, the drive can be repaired or replaced before any data is lost or damaged.

The S.M.A.R.T. system monitors the drive for anything that might seem out of the ordinary, documents it, and analyzes the data. If it sees something that indicates a problem, it is capable of notifying the user (or system administrator). S.M.A.R.T. monitors disk performance, faulty sectors, recalibration, CRC errors, drive spin-up time, drive heads, distance between the heads and the disk platters, drive temperature, and characteristics of the media, motor and servomechanisms. The errors the system can detect can be predicted by a number of methods. Currently the SMART system can detect about 70% of all hard drive errors.

Here's an example: motor and/or bearing failure can be predicted by an increase in the drive spin-up time and the number of retries it takes to get the drive spinning at full speed. Or, if the drive notes that error correction is being needed excessively, it can attribute this to a broken drive head or surface contamination, and it will create an alert before the problem gets worse. Armed with a prediction of failure, the user or system administrator can make a backup copy of key data, replace a suspect device prior to data loss, and avoid undesired downtime.

http://www.ariolic.com/activesmart/smart-technology.html

ati
10-02-05, 05:27 PM
Is my SMART readings good or bad?

CorpX
10-02-05, 11:52 PM
does it say anything during boot?

RJARRRPCGP
10-03-05, 12:35 AM
It appears that failure is imminent for your Deskstar. :eek: :( :cry:

That reminds me of when I was required to return my Seagate Barracuda 80 GB UDMA 100 PATA HDD back on June 2 when I purchased it on May 14. Because it randomly emitted a squeak when seeking alot. Not only that, it's SMART was reporting a problem with the "Raw Read Error Rate" attribute and some other attributes. Also, a T.E.C. was projected!!! :temper:

ActiveSMART reported a T.E.C. for June, 2005. :eek: That was when I purchased in May. That means it was predicting only 1 month of life!!! That really sucks!!! That's with the HDD mentioned on the bottom of my sig.

On June 2, I ended up just getting another Maxtor HDD. I also don't regret that I did, because the Maxtor HDD's faster than the Seagate Barracuda 80 GB UDMA 100 PATA HDD that was returned. At least according to HD Tach and did seem to feel faster. Quieter, too.

ati
10-05-05, 07:05 PM
yea sometimes this DEATHstar makes like scrapign noises lol. Im saving up for a SATA drive what would you guys reccomend? Ive been backing up eveyrnight just incase it dies.