Also does the drive or windows have any emergency "your drive is about to die" life support mode where you can't use it other than to get files out?
Not really on hard disks. If you're constantly monitoring S.M.A.R.T. you might get an early warning of imminent demise, but it's equally likely the drive could suddenly stop working. I run Hard Disk Sentinel on my machines, but it doesn't provide any 'magic bullet' or 'get out of jail option'.
Some SSDs drop into 'read-only' mode when things start to go bad, but the only sensible way to protect data is to keep multiple copies on different devices/media, with at least one copy held off site.
If your one and only set of family photos disappear "up the proverbial j-plane" i.e. they cease to be real and become imaginary (non-existant), you've only got yourself to blame for the loss.
Is there such a thing as normal clicks?
In a word, "yes". You get to know what's normal and what's not when your first drive suffers the "Click of Death". It might never happen, or you might never hear it, but drives do not last forever.
Yea I was wondering the same thing. I've read around 5 years or more is the average especially if your not doing some constant intensive load stuff.
I have a 6TB drive start to fail in a RAID-Z2 server with only 6-days of use on the counter. I bought the drive brand new but that didn't stop it from developing pending bad blocks. The drive was outside its 3-year warranty, so I replaced it with a new drive and re-silvered the array.
Moral of the storey is drives can fail at any time.
However, I do have some server "pulls" (Enterprise class drives) with more than 3-years continuous use, but with a low start/stop count of 60 cycles according to HD Sentinel. In comparison, your drive has a power on count of 2800, so potentially it's been stressed more.