I have a couple of reasons for doing this:

1. These are "bulk" drives, not retail, so I don't trust them as much. I really 
want to return as many as possible right off the bat, any that might have 
failed in the first month or two. The price difference between these and retail 
(or even Newegg) makes this well worth my while, especially since we are 
purchasing 100. 

2. 30 of these are going into our computer lab, where we are very tight for 
space. We had special flush mounts made so that our Optiplex 745's hang off the 
back of our tables (not folding tables), saving a lot of desk space. Because of 
this(and for other reasons), the tables need to screwed to the floor, and some 
have their backs to the wall, which means everything must be pulled out to get 
the PC out of the mount. This setup has worked extremely well for us for 1.5 
years, and I haven't had to pull out a single PC yet.

3. I'd like to use this same setup in the future to test my server drives 
before I put them into production.

4. Something else I'm thinking about that I'll elaborate on later...

Our current drives are 5-6 year old 80GB and benchmarked at about 50MBps 
read/write. My new 1TB 7200rpm test drives benched over 100MBps. The difference 
is noticeable with our aging hardware. We will also be adding RAM, upgrading to 
Win7, etc. I did the math and we are spending 1/3 to 1/4 the cost of buying new 
PCs. I will buy a few spare 745's or 755's(they are dirt cheap) in case any die.

-----Original Message-----
From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On 
Behalf Of Brian Desmond
Sent: Monday, May 20, 2013 2:54 PM
To: ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com
Subject: [NTSysADM] RE: What's the best app to torture test new hard drives?

Is the cost to do this exercise lower than just replacing saying six failed 
hard drives (given a 5 to 7 percent failure rate) over the next three years?

I've never heard of anyone do this - it seems like an awful lot of work for a 
return I'm having trouble quantifying. 

Thanks,
Brian Desmond
br...@briandesmond.com

w – 312.625.1438 | c – 312.731.3132

-----Original Message-----
From: listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] On 
Behalf Of listserve
Sent: Monday, May 20, 2013 11:55 AM
To: 'ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com'
Subject: [NTSysADM] What's the best app to torture test new hard drives?

I'm going to be ordering about 100 hard drives in the next month or so to 
upgrade our desktops over the summer. I'd like to be able to put 10(or more) of 
these at a time in 2 enclosures(5-bays each) I have and run thorough surface 
scans on them before installing them. (30 of them are going into workstations 
that are mounted in a computer lab where the drives will be more difficult to 
remove later)

I've used Spinrite for years, and actually got it running in several VMs under 
hyper-v, using pass-through disks. This works well because I can scan multiple 
drives at once, which really is necessary since one scan alone can take 50 
hours. Spinrite just doesn't get the SMART data while in a VM, but I can do 
that in the host with a different app. I'm also a little concerned that 
write-caching in the host could interfere with the accuracy of the surface 
scan, but have no way to know since this is an unsupported configuration for 
that app. 

Do you guys know of any other apps out there similar to Spinrite, that I can 
hopefully run in the host instead of inside a VM? My main requirement is that I 
be able to scan multiple disks at once. 

Any other thoughts on this? Better way to approach it altogether?

Thanks,

Mike

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