I don't trust any drive. Flash, optical, tape or platter.
That's why I create multiple backups whatever the format.
two of them died at one time.
You should probably rethink the cross your fingers strategy![]()
Omg you resurrected a thread from 2014?Just trying to recover 1 tb worth of data out of a two TB Drive im starting to not trust them
Does that win any awards?Omg you resurrected a thread from 2014?
Not to mention that he's trying to do it over a USB 2.0 USB-SATA adapter! @Kitten KongOmg you resurrected a thread from 2014?
Things may have changed a bit since then.
You could have looked at a kimsufi server, for peanuts a month they have at least a 500 gig drive and transfer stuff at backbone speeds, choice of OS systems, but you have to setup everything other than the OS yourself.Cloud backup is obviously an option, but for most, upload speeds are still pitiful.
I had a customer who wanted a "small" Dropbox upload which turned out to be 83GB.
I assumed most of her Dropbox was already uploaded.
Erm.... No.
Even with my fibre 5GB upload, it would have taken days and days. That surprised her.
I explored cloud backup last year, but no uk provider offered a hard drive initial seed service. At that time anyway.
That's for OS releasesThe rule of thumb I've lived by for years: Even numbers good, odd numbers bad.
WD had issues some years ago following flood damage to the manufacturing plants, they had everything refurbed but the inital post flood drives drives would rapidly loose dataMy 3 TB WD external USB HDD is chugging along every bit as well as my Toshiba 2 TB one does.
While there are definitely certain models, in certain capacities, that are to be avoided due to their track records, I have seen nothing convincing that certain capacities are, themselves, more prone to failure.
That depends on the numbering system that has ended up with Win 10 being 10(Hang on - XP was Windows 5, Vista was Windows 6, Windows 7, 8 and 10 were, well, 7, 8 and 9. Have you got really weird taste in OSes?)