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Tomaszz2020-08-10 14:01:26
Windows
Tomaszz, 2020-08-10 14:01:26

Is hibernation bad for an SSD?

Guys, let's agree that in responses like "No, this is nonsense." - there is no understanding and unambiguity, and they cannot be considered an answer. Either answer as exhaustively as possible with proofs, or don't answer at all.
Link to first question: Is hibernation bad for SSD?

So, the question is:
Can hibernation significantly affect the life of an SSD drive, provided that its capacity is 256 GB and the amount of RAM is 16 GB?
I understand that the SSD is like a consumable item and needs to be changed sooner or later, but I just want to understand how much it will last for normal work with transitions to Hibernation 2-3 times a day.

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3 answer(s)
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Ronald McDonald, 2020-08-10
@Tomaszz

Can hibernation significantly affect the life of an SSD drive, provided that it is 256 GB and 16 GB of RAM?

No, this is nonsense.
Either answer as exhaustively as possible with proofs, or don't answer at all.

Woo-way.

A
antonwx, 2020-08-10
@antonwx

Suppose that your RAM is full and when you go into hibernation, all 16 GB are written to the disk again (although even in this case, all 16 GB are not written, but we will omit this nuance for simplicity).
Let's say you hibernate 3 times a day. In this case, additional wear will be 48 GB per day, or 17 terabytes per year. Even the bottom cheapest ssd from dexp for 250 gigs has a resource TBW = 125. Yes, your controller will die sooner than this resource runs out.

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Artem @Jump, 2020-08-10
curated by the

Can hibernation significantly affect the life of an SSD drive, provided that it is 256 GB and 16 GB of RAM?
No.
The recording volume is scanty, the RAM in a home computer will be occupied at the level of 2-8GB, as a rule, the rest is a cache. From the fact that you dump such a volume several times a day on the disk - these are trifles.
but I just want to understand how much it will be enough for normal work with transitions to Hibernation 2-3 times a day.
For five years. In five years, it will work great, but it will be terribly outdated, so we will have to get rid of it. Well, of course, if it doesn't break. Equipment tends to break down - the controller will burn out, or the firmware will fail.
At home, it is possible to disable a disk by write cycles only if you specifically set yourself such a goal - set up the system for this and wait.
In real operation, this is on the verge of fantasy.

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