cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Intel ssd 60gb 330 series reports wrong power on hour count

idata
Esteemed Contributor III

hello yesterday i bought my first ssd an intel 330 60gb series . so i run the ssd toolbox and ssdlife and it does report to me 100years work time. is it a known bug?

or there is something wrong with my ssd? also i run a crystaldiskmark benchmark and i have only 80mb/s at write and 400 on read but i guess this is because this bench used incopressed data. this work time will be a problem if some time in the feature i wanna sell this disk.... any ideas?

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

plee21
New Contributor III
New Contributor III

Hi

This is nothing to worry about and we are all seeing this issue. The problem is the number given by the drive isn't a straight forward conversion to hours, so software that reads this number gets it wrong completely if it just assumes the number is total hours, as it isn't.

The Intel tool box isn't showing hours, but the raw SMART data, so technically it isn't misleading you, as the raw data often requires converting or interpreting to make any sense. SSDlife Pro on the other hand is taking that raw value and incorrectly assuming it is total hours, so you get a silly power on hours duration!

CrystalDiskInfo seems to work out the power on hours count okay after watching the number increment over a few minutes, so you could try that if you want to see your power on hours correctly. http://crystalmark.info http://crystalmark.info

I'm sure software like SSDlife will catch up shortly and start correctly converting the raw data to meaningful hours.

Regards

Phil

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2

plee21
New Contributor III
New Contributor III

Hi

This is nothing to worry about and we are all seeing this issue. The problem is the number given by the drive isn't a straight forward conversion to hours, so software that reads this number gets it wrong completely if it just assumes the number is total hours, as it isn't.

The Intel tool box isn't showing hours, but the raw SMART data, so technically it isn't misleading you, as the raw data often requires converting or interpreting to make any sense. SSDlife Pro on the other hand is taking that raw value and incorrectly assuming it is total hours, so you get a silly power on hours duration!

CrystalDiskInfo seems to work out the power on hours count okay after watching the number increment over a few minutes, so you could try that if you want to see your power on hours correctly. http://crystalmark.info http://crystalmark.info

I'm sure software like SSDlife will catch up shortly and start correctly converting the raw data to meaningful hours.

Regards

Phil

idata
Esteemed Contributor III

i would like to thank you for your answer:) got it!