SSDs - a cautionary tale
Posted: 02 Feb 2015, 07:18
I do hope this is preaching to choir
I updated my PC over Christmas including a new motherboard with SATA 3. This finally made the 256Gb SSD I had finally fly. Sadly Windows 7 couldn't cope with the changed motherboard and had to be totally rebuilt. Sigh! All that stuff to be re-registered. Nevertheless off we went and all was sweetness and light until last weekend when the SSD suffered a failure. I mean Failure, Catastrophic; even the BIOS couldn't recognise it. I can't tell you what I said - the sailors in the forum would blush.
After the rebuild I'd invested in Acronis TrueImage 2015 and had been making regular backups. So, out with the SSD, in with the 500gb HD that it had replaced (ages ago and I couldn't bear to throw away). Full partition restore and less than two hours after losing the C: drive completely I was up and running and back to normal. The only problems were having to re-activate MS Office and reload the motherboard drivers.
The morals of the story are
There you go, end of sermon.
Paul


I updated my PC over Christmas including a new motherboard with SATA 3. This finally made the 256Gb SSD I had finally fly. Sadly Windows 7 couldn't cope with the changed motherboard and had to be totally rebuilt. Sigh! All that stuff to be re-registered. Nevertheless off we went and all was sweetness and light until last weekend when the SSD suffered a failure. I mean Failure, Catastrophic; even the BIOS couldn't recognise it. I can't tell you what I said - the sailors in the forum would blush.
After the rebuild I'd invested in Acronis TrueImage 2015 and had been making regular backups. So, out with the SSD, in with the 500gb HD that it had replaced (ages ago and I couldn't bear to throw away). Full partition restore and less than two hours after losing the C: drive completely I was up and running and back to normal. The only problems were having to re-activate MS Office and reload the motherboard drivers.
The morals of the story are
- 1) when your SSD goes it' gonna go big time
2) get a decent backup program that can do partition backups and
3) if you want to minimise downtime, keep a replacement disc of the same or larger capacity on hand.
There you go, end of sermon.
Paul