meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote:
> Hi,
>
> for storing not so often used data I bought a 2.5" external USB
> harddisk.
>
> This little beast has a very small timespan before it goes idle 
> and (from the time needed to be woken up) it seems, it parks its
> heads then.
>
> The main usage of the disk to be connected to my PC from time to
> time, copy some data and unconnect it again. It will never be used
> with a laptop or such (accu driven machinery).
>
> Is it advisable to try to longen the active time before the disk
> goes idle to prolong the lifetime ?
> Is it possible to do this with hdparm?
> It is a sane idea? ;)
>
> Thank you very much in advance for any help !
> Best regards,
> Meino
>
>

I'm no expert by any means.  I've read all sort of opinions on this. 
I've read that it is better to leave puters running 24/7 so that there
is no cool/hot cycles and that it makes things last longer.  I've also
read just the opposite for different reasons.  Which is true, not sure. 
I know I leave my machine running 24/7 and hardware wise, it has worked
well plus I don't have to wait for boot up and such either.  I might
add, I'm on my puter a LOT.  Even when I am asleep, I have it
downloading something, usually TV shows or something.  That is why I
have a 3TB drive that is almost full.  I do have a backup drive now
tho.  ;-)

I would also suspect that this may also depend on how the drive is made
and what it is engineered to handle.  If a drive is made with a good
solid design for parking those heads a lot, then it should handle them. 
If it is not designed to handle it, well, it may not end well.  Maybe
research that model and see if you can find the limits on it, if there
is any, info or limits. 

Alan usually has some good info to share on this sort of topic.  He
deals with a lot of servers and other hardware.  Maybe he can provide
more info or a link to some.  It's a interesting question tho. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 


Reply via email to