How Long Should A Hard Drive Last?
- 2
- Add a Comment
How long should a hard drive last and are the new solid state drives going to be more reliable? –Peter
Today’s hard drives are faster, store more information, and are more reliable than ever before, but just like any other electronic devices, they have the possibility of failing.
Current hard drives are designed to run non-stop for years and have warranties that range from one to five years, but that is of little comfort if a six-month-old drive full of your family photos, address books, or financial information fails and you don’t have a current backup.
A thin attempt at trying to rate the life of a hard drive through MTBF (Mean Time Between Failure) has been around for a long time, but the reason I call it “thin” is that every manufacturer uses different parameters for publishing this spec.
An MTBF of 700,000 hours equates to about 80 years, which is NOT how long you can expect the hard drive to last, but a rating based on a bunch of math that the manufacturer chose that can be misleading.
MTBF has become in the words of a pundit on the Internet “a statistical measure that we are not supposed to believe,” so don’t take it at face value.
Based on our Data Recovery lab’s experience over the years, a high MTBF rating is fairly immaterial because the vast majority of the failed drives we are asked to recover data from are less than three years old.
What makes a hard drive failure unlike any other type of electronic failure is not only do you lose the use of the device, you potentially lose all of the information that is stored on it.
Think about how tragic the failure of your DVD player would be if all your movies and family videos disappeared along with it.
Despite the age and mechanical nature of magnetic hard drives (which were first created in 1956), they continue to be the most economical way to store large amounts of information.
For almost the entire 20+ years that I have been involved in the computer industry, I have been hearing the prophecies of the “end of the magnetic hard drive.”
Despite all of the various alternative storage technologies that have been developed, none have been able to overcome a simple economic equation: the cost per megabyte.
The most recent entry into mass storage is the Solid State Drive (SSD) which is based on the same technology as your digital camera’s memory card, just a lot bigger (and a lot more expensive)!
As a point of reference, the current price for an 80 GB SSD is over $1500, while a magnetic 80 GB drive is less than $60. The SSD’s cost per GB will have to come way down before the average Joe has any interest in owning it.
While it’s true that SSDs have no moving parts, there is no data that suggests that they are more reliable as a result. In fact, some are suggesting that since chip failure is more common than drive failure in today’s personal computers, it might actually make SSDs less reliable in the long run.
The most interesting thing that I have seen from the mass storage community is what are being labeled “hybrid” hard drives (HHDs).
Hybrids incorporate the best of today’s magnetic technology with a very large Solid State “cache” drive, which makes the drive faster and consume less battery life making them ideal for laptops.
A cache circuit stores recently accessed information, which reduces the need to go back to the spinning magnetic hard drive which is what speeds up access times.
There are some drawbacks to this method of data storage and access, so the jury is still out as to whether this combination is worth the extra money.
What you really need to take away from this column is this:
There are only two kinds of hard drives: those that have failed and those that are going to fail, so plan accordingly (back up, back up, back up)!
Ken Colburn
President of Data Doctors Computer Services, Host of the award-winning Computer Corner radio show, and Author of Computer Q&A in the East Valley Tribune newspapers.

2 Comments
NewJohnny
March 28th, 2008
at 7:07pm
In a business environment, the IT department knows that redundancy is the key to keeping things running smooth. The only trickle down into the consumer world has been RAID (two or more hard drives). Unfortunately, consumer RAID solutions are mysterious at best, disastrous at worst.
Hard drives should have been redundant to begin with. They should be sold in pairs and have RAID-like tech built directly into the firmware. Microsoft is making good strides in this area with their Windows Home Server product. Check it out at:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/windowshomeserver/default.mspx
Houston Web Designer
January 2nd, 2009
at 8:33am
With Hard drives alot of it will depend on how its used. Cooling can make a huge impact in a hard drive’s lifespan. My first workstation I was running two simple SATA drives with no raid. I had 8 x 80mm fans mounted in the case to provide more than enough cooling. Both drives were still working great after 5 years. Cooling is very important. Especially if you are running the newer SAS drives which tend to get really hot. SSD drives are fast but there is still some questions about their lifespan being that flash memory only supports a limited number of read and write cycles.