OK, but this drive is on a machine with 2 operating systems installed. 
Reinstalling and reconfiguring those takes just as much time before the drive 
fails as after, so replacing preemptively wastes time (until the drive starts 
experiencing regular problems, which it isn't yet). And I have at least 2 
backups for all of the data, so I won't lose anything. If a drive starts 
experiencing regular problems, then I order a new one and replace it before it 
dies. So far this is an isolated problem. I had a drive once that acquired a 
bad sector, and nothing changed for another 1 or 2 years when it started adding 
new bad sectors regularly, then I replaced it while it was still usable. 
Another drive failed fairly suddenly with no warning after only 1.5 years and I 
lost some non-critical data, since I wasn't taking backups as seriously at the 
time. That won't happen again.

The point is, no matter how often I replace the drives, failures can happen. 
Without backups, those could result in data loss. With backups, I can avoid 
data loss if I know  which files are affected, which Samuel's information makes 
possible. And if the drive holds one or more OSes (not just data) it takes time 
to reinstall and reconfigure and it's not worth it until a problem starts 
repeating.
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