I’ve not been burned by 16TB HDD (DOA) and 8TB SSD (seems to be crapping out after being filled ~halfway). I’m very frustrated by this.

The SSD is an older Samsung model that uses SATA, since I’m mostly using this as a data archive. Seem SATA options are becoming rare for SSDs.

Whenever I try to copy ~1GB of data to it, it will revert to a ReadOnly mode in the middle of the copy process. This is on linux. I’ll probably try some more troubleshooting of it, but I’m not too confident about it being my ‘data archive’ drive anymore.

From some searching, it seems that the RO mode switch is a sign of the disk going into a protected-failure state. Anyone have any experience with this? Recommendations for data archive drives of this size that are not ridiculously expensive?

  • unperson [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    There are dirt-cheap cards (10 USD) that just wire a PCIe x16 connector into 4 M.2 PCIe x4 sockets. They only work if the firmware of the motherboard lets you split the x16 into four slots, and the CPU supports that many lanes.

    It’s complicated, ASUS has a huge table that you have to cross-reference with the CPU you have installed and figure out what will work.

    The only other option I think could make sense is a thunderbolt adapter like https://www.owc.com/solutions/express-4m2. If you’re making a NAS then I really don’t see the point of PCIe storage.

    • culpritus [any]@hexbear.netOP
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      1 year ago

      That’s a really interesting option. Thanks! I might have to consider that for my Ryzen 7 rig eventually if it is supported.

      It does seem like SATA is the way to go to keep things reasonably priced.

      Appreciate your inputs.