10-01-2013 05:42 PM
Before getting SSD drives, only once I saw a "file system error" on my HDDs until now.
Now, I get too many "file system errors" on 2xSSD520 (Raid 0) on
DZ77RE-75K Intel motherboard. Maybe 3 times last month. Windows error check mayrecover some files, but I don't even know if that is all of my files. Some ofmy Evernote files got permanently corrupted on the first "file systemerror". Good thing that I just started habit of backing up data.To me, for now it looks like SSDs on Raid 0 are about a 100 times more
likely to create these kinds of problems. Even if I could restore files frombackup, I prefer not to deal with all these hassle. I am willing to give up theraid idea. So; I want to know how to structure my OS, files, and SSDs on mynext reinstall of windows 8 (8.1) to not deal with this problem no more. Myquestions are:10-02-2013 10:58 AM
Pitiko, the best recommendation is running a full diagnostic scan with the Intel® SSD Toolbox in order to verify the integrity of the drives; it is possible that you may need to test each drive separately and use another drive for the operating system.
Answering your questions below:
The following article provides basic RAID information that may help you further:
http://www.intel.com/support/chipsets/imsm/sb/cs-009337.htm Intel� Rapid Storage Technology (Intel� RST); RAID 0, 1, 5, 10, Matrix RAID, RAID-Ready
10-03-2013 01:28 AM
I ran Full Diagnostic scan, once for raid volume and each SSD drive. They completed successfully. OS is still on the raid volume.
I bought the SSDs 3 months ago. SMART shows everything normalized at 100. What are other causes of repeated file system error? Can a bad Power source Unit cause it? Anyway of testing or checking event logs for PSU malfunction?
The other problems I always have with this new custom PC (after every fresh reinstall of windows 😎 are:
1) USB disconnect/reconnect (in 3 seconds) randomly few times a day. I have disabled "USB selective suspend" in power options and disallowed USBs to be turned off in device manager. Problem is still there. One culprit for that could be PSU.2) Almost every time I shut down (properly) my PC after 12am, it turns off, waits 10-20 seconds, turns itself back on [I shut it manually when tries to restart].10-04-2013 10:51 AM
If power supply is a suspect then swap the cables powering the drives. Usually the motherboard manufacturers provide software to monitor motherboard activity such as voltages, fan speed and temperatures. You may monitor the voltages coming from the power supply especially when the system is under stress. It is even better if you can test with completely different power supply.
You may also consider testing the system out of the case in a non-conductive surface (like a cardboard) with the minimum components only since grounding issues or false contacts are usual cause for erratic behavior.