
- #Seagate power on time count how to#
- #Seagate power on time count install#
- #Seagate power on time count software#
After you unplug it the first time, try to prevent the disk from entering idle so that you don't need to repeat it. Unplugging your HDD unexpectedly will eventually wear it out if repeated, but it may only be required once to restore access. Once the disk was accessible, it became inaccessible again if left inactive for 30 to 60 seconds, because the actuator parks automatically. When it was spun-down properly, it could not be accessed until spun-up and unplugged again. After the disk was unplugged while spinning, it could be accessed again. With both the first ST5000DM000 and the ST2000DM001, the I/O Device Errors could not be cleared until the disk was unexpectedly unplugged (something normally to avoid). Be warned that even without installation, you will still need to overwrite a pen drive. Just stay away from KDE editions, which are tremendously buggy and will crash on you at the wrong time.

#Seagate power on time count install#
If you do not currently have a Linux installation or don't want to install it on any computer, you could use something such as Manjaro or Linux Mint that allows you to run from a pen drive without installation. The only reason I did not use Linux for the Seagate HDDs is because the proprietary Duplicate Cleaner does not work there, and the defective HDD was too large and mostly redundant to transfer everything. Try using Linux to access your Seagate HDD, which continues to access defective disks far longer than Windows.
#Seagate power on time count software#
This software has saved files every time another disk burnt-out with I/O Device Errors, and is definitely on the right side of things. If your Seagate HDD was used for a few hours, regardless of which program was using it, the disk could burn-out easily, especially if it is a 7200 RPM model. As of now, the ST2000DM001 is completely burnt-out after exceeding 55 C for a few hours, even though it was only used for a total of 170 hours, or about a week.

Within days, the 7200 RPM Seagate HDD was blocked with I/O Device Errors when trying to access it, and it appeared to be permanently shut before it finally busted open again.

The ST2000DM001 was burning at 57 C because it was used for a few hours. At about 3:30 AM that night, I gave up on transferring to the second 5980 RPM, and instead used an ST2000DM001 (7200 RPM). At first, I was transferring unique files to a second ST5000DM000, but the second disk cannot be defragmented since it has defective firmware with errors, so transfers from the first ST5000DM000 became jammed multiple times throughout the night. The I/O Device Errors became more frequent and persistent, and it was just synchronized in time. With Duplicate Cleaner, I was finally able to synchronize it, right around the time the I/O Device Errors started blocking out access.
#Seagate power on time count how to#
I had a ST5000DM000 (5980 RPM) that was corrupting files and failed diagnostic tests, but I did not know how to synchronize the contents with another disk for months.
