Question I think Crystal Disk Info giving inaccurate information ?

universalrule

Prominent
Jul 3, 2023
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I just checked 2 of my portable SSDs. Both of their TBW is 600. One is WD Blue SSD 3D and another one is Sandisk Ultra SSD 3D. The Crystal Disk Info shows me something very wrong.

As you can see above, WD has written more than Sandisk, but the lifespan still 99% remains whereas Sandisk indicates 98%.
IMO, WD uses a trick to fool Crystal Disk Info, or the app is inaccurate.
What do you think?
 
I just checked 2 of my portable SSDs. Both of their TBW is 600. One is WD Blue SSD 3D and another one is Sandisk Ultra SSD 3D. The Crystal Disk Info shows me something very wrong.

As you can see above, WD has written more than Sandisk, but the lifespan still 99% remains whereas Sandisk indicates 98%.
IMO, WD uses a trick to fool Crystal Disk Info, or the app is inaccurate.
What do you think?
Lifespan/health is an arbitrary function, specially for SSDs, based on TBW estimate and usage as well warranty and time to it's end, It's up to program's developer to interpret it. Disks can go bad and/or die even when 101% healthy. There's no program or anybody that can predict that. As long as SMART table is normal, you can be reasonably sure it will last long time.
 

universalrule

Prominent
Jul 3, 2023
41
2
535
Last edited:

universalrule

Prominent
Jul 3, 2023
41
2
535
Lifespan/health is an arbitrary function, specially for SSDs, based on TBW estimate and usage as well warranty and time to it's end, It's up to program's developer to interpret it. Disks can go bad and/or die even when 101% healthy. There's no program or anybody that can predict that. As long as SMART table is normal, you can be reasonably sure it will last long time.
I have 15 SSDs, but luckily none of them has any issue since 2019. I don't use front port nor USB hub for the portable drives. I also have 5 HDDs, and 2 of them have issues even though I've taken care of them carefully.
 
I would have liked to have seen the attribute values, particularly Media Wearout Indicator (MWI).

SanDisk
  • Average P/E Cycles = 0x9 = 9 (decimal)

    MWI = 0x0205005A0205 -> 0x0205 / 0x005A / 0x0205 -> 0x02 0x05 / 0x00 0x5A / 0x02 0x05 -> 2.05% / 0.90% / 2.05%
WD
  • Average P/E Cycles = 0xA = 10 (decimal)

    MWI = 0x013601000136 -> 0x0136 / 0x0100 / 0x0136 -> 0x01 0x36 / 0x01 0x00 / 0x01 0x36 -> 1.54% / 1.00% / 1.54%
I believe that the MWI is encoded in 3 parts as ...
  • % wear (worst case) / % wear based on P/E cycles / % wear based on TBW
In both cases the rated number of P/E cycles appears to be 1000. For example, in the WD case a P/E cycle count of 10 is 1% of 1000, and for SanDisk a count of 9 is 0.9% of 1000.

As for TBW, in the WD case we have ...
  • 42920 GiB x (100 % / 1.54%) = 2993 terabytes
Therefore, the rated TBW appears to be 3000 TB. I expect that 600TBW is used for warranty purposes.

However, applying the same logic to the SanDisk case we have ...
  • 30356 GiB x (100 % / 2.05%) = 1590 TB
I have no explanation for the difference.
 
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