Monday 28 January 2013

SSD cannot be detected

I have been a huge advocate of Solid State Drives (SSD), for my clients and my own computers I have been quick to jump on the bandwagon of putting an SSD in every computer I can.

OCZ SSD

Since they started being affordable back in 2010 - 2011 I have since upgraded multiple clients to these blistering fast components, as a way to ensure no bottlenecks in new computers and a way of resuscitating old ones. However, out of the multitude of installs performed I have had a few of these components fail usually after a restart of the computer or on boot.

Hopefully you do not see this as much as I have
If you see the error message above or similar and your computer has an SSD as the primary drive, your computer is pretty much screwed. The drive is probably not visible in BIOS, and if you manage to take the drive out and into another computer to double check, you will probably see the drive but it contains no data and is essentially inaccessible. So start digging around for the receipt or proof of purchase to check if it is warranty.

I have mainly been using OCZ, Patriot and Kingston SSD's and have had failures across all brands, I would assume the more expensive Intel produced SSD's will be of higher quality, but it is something to be wary of, in my experience a standard mechanical hard drive purchased today will be more reliable then a low to med quality SSD. In saying that SSD's definitely have their place, if you are going to use in an office environment where no user content is stored on the SSD then happy days, but I would not be storing family photos on one until I am convinced they have become as reliable as the mechanical brethren.

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