Thanks for the quick reply, i only worried about permanent damage since at my area power loss happen sometimes and very unexpected disregard to weather. I've read some threads online seeing ssd is more susceptible than hdd, is it really true?Handling?
Most hard drives of any type will survive ordinary power outages without damage.
But you may be referring to data loss, rather than permanent damage to the drive?
Or you may be referring to a direct and nearby lightning strike?
I have used an ancestor of the MX500 for a decade without incident, including going through quite a few power outages.
If you had a power outage and now have problems, a failure of the drive probably wouldn't be first on my list of suspicions.
Thanks for your inputsHere's a quote from Crucial's own spec sheet on the MX500:
"Integrated Power Loss Immunity: .......protects your data swiftly and efficiently, so if your system suddenly shuts down, you keep all your saved work".
Make of that what you will.
I cannot recall anything about SSDs being more prone to damage in power losses. I can't say one way or another.
Needless to say, you should have at least 2 copies of any important data. Worse case scenario: your SSD drops dead due to a power outage. You lose no data because you have a backup. You buy a new drive, reinstall Windows, restore your backed up data, and carry on.
If your prone to power loss in your area consider getting an UPS.Thanks for the quick reply, i only worried about permanent damage since at my area power loss happen sometimes and very unexpected disregard to weather. I've read some threads online seeing ssd is more susceptible than hdd, is it really true?
I'm kinda in indigent atm, maybe if skip lunch for another month then i could afford itIf your prone to power loss in your area consider getting an UPS.
It will give the machine time to do an orderly shutdown.