Posted August 08, 2023
There is not any issues with heat regarding my internal Toshiba HDD, it usually runs between 40 and 50 C, no matter the transfer size. This sturdy huge HDD is made for moving huge data in mind, this is not any critical as it is a datacenter 24/7 drive, so it has been build for those loads in mind. Whats important simply is, i does need proper airflow (a small external enclosure is bad, except for quick backups) and it should not be shut down (having endless cycles) all the time, so no sleep mode here, this can be damaging over time.
SSDs on the other hand are not so heat tolerant, but the external SSD can handle much more than the internal drives, because the external drives are very slow, yet they do do not procude a lot of heat on the controller. The external Samsung T5 SSD (this is my download drive) is actually the coldest running drive... with just 30 C (after a redundancy check), the second coldest drive is the Toshiba HDD with 41 C (up to 50 C during extended loads, this is my archive drive with huge data transfers). Internal SSDs usually are tuned for short timed "bursts", with not more than 30 sec full load, so they are only handling installed games, not any "datacenter-matters".
The hottest HDD i ever had was a Ultrastar 10 TB air filled drive in a prebuild external enclosure. During huge file transfer it was able to heat up to 70 C, yet those drives are still alive. I think regarding quality, Toshiba and Ultrastar are the most reliable drives. The Ultrastar in theory is as well a 24/7 drive but for huge file transfer it will need active cooling, especially when using a air filled HDD with huge performance; those are the hottest HDDs ever made. So the manufacturer was a bit stupid putting the hottest HDDs inside a small external enclosure... yet they still survive the extreme heat... simply great quality.
The hottest SSD is a internal Samsung 990 PRO, it can heat up to 70 C or even more in just about a min. But this drive is not used as a datacenter... it is only handling installed games, so it rarely is used more than 20 sec in a row. This is NOT a datacenter drive, not even a download drive... and it should not be used for. Samsung was optimizing it for being able to boot applications the fastest way possible.
The issue i had was on the GoG servers... this is very clear at this point.
There is no general rule, it depends on "how a drive has been build" and what it was intended for... so, using the right drive (datacenter spec) you can even transfer files 24h in a row.
But using a very fast "burst type" SSD, this would be deadly... as they are tuned in order to handle short timed loads... for example when loading a game.
SSDs on the other hand are not so heat tolerant, but the external SSD can handle much more than the internal drives, because the external drives are very slow, yet they do do not procude a lot of heat on the controller. The external Samsung T5 SSD (this is my download drive) is actually the coldest running drive... with just 30 C (after a redundancy check), the second coldest drive is the Toshiba HDD with 41 C (up to 50 C during extended loads, this is my archive drive with huge data transfers). Internal SSDs usually are tuned for short timed "bursts", with not more than 30 sec full load, so they are only handling installed games, not any "datacenter-matters".
The hottest HDD i ever had was a Ultrastar 10 TB air filled drive in a prebuild external enclosure. During huge file transfer it was able to heat up to 70 C, yet those drives are still alive. I think regarding quality, Toshiba and Ultrastar are the most reliable drives. The Ultrastar in theory is as well a 24/7 drive but for huge file transfer it will need active cooling, especially when using a air filled HDD with huge performance; those are the hottest HDDs ever made. So the manufacturer was a bit stupid putting the hottest HDDs inside a small external enclosure... yet they still survive the extreme heat... simply great quality.
The hottest SSD is a internal Samsung 990 PRO, it can heat up to 70 C or even more in just about a min. But this drive is not used as a datacenter... it is only handling installed games, so it rarely is used more than 20 sec in a row. This is NOT a datacenter drive, not even a download drive... and it should not be used for. Samsung was optimizing it for being able to boot applications the fastest way possible.
The issue i had was on the GoG servers... this is very clear at this point.
There is no general rule, it depends on "how a drive has been build" and what it was intended for... so, using the right drive (datacenter spec) you can even transfer files 24h in a row.
But using a very fast "burst type" SSD, this would be deadly... as they are tuned in order to handle short timed loads... for example when loading a game.
Post edited August 09, 2023 by Xeshra