Can I Still Use an Unhealthy SSD?

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Asked By GamerGal123 On

Hey everyone! I've been having some trouble with my gaming laptop, specifically with the M.2 SATA SSD, which is showing about 80% health. I've been experiencing frequent BSODs (Blue Screens of Death) and I'm considering replacing the SSD soon. Before I do that, I'm planning to clean out the laptop and apply some thermal paste to the CPU because the SSD tends to run really hot, reaching temperatures between 70-90 degrees Celsius. I'm curious about a few things: 1) Is it safe to use this old SSD as a secondary drive in my desktop? 2) Is it safe to use the old SSD as a secondary drive in my laptop? 3) Should I try to unallocate half of the drive's space in hopes of avoiding bad sectors? I'd really appreciate any advice you have!

6 Answers

Answered By AvoidRiskyDrives On

Once an SSD shows signs of failure, it’s best to retire it for good. Trying to unallocate space won’t help since the SSD manages data automatically, and if it’s failing, it will just keep degrading.

Answered By HealthCheckerX On

Depending on your health monitoring software, the 80% health might just reflect the amount of data written rather than actual hardware failure. If BSODs continue, try a clean install of your OS to rule out software issues first.

Answered By TechWhiz98 On

If your SSD is really failing, I'd advise against using it for anything critical. You could use it for temporary storage, like for some media files, but I'd avoid putting anything important on it.

GamerGal123 -

Got it, thanks for the tip!

Answered By SecureYourData99 On

The safest option is to clone your data to a new SSD and then dispose of the old one. If you still need to keep it, consider using it as a secondary boot drive, but understand it might fail at any moment, which could lead to lost data.

GamerGal123 -

That makes sense, thanks!

Answered By QuestionBuster On

To analyze those BSODs, check for dump files in C:WindowsMinidump. If you find any, zip them up and share them. This could help in figuring out if the SSD or something else is causing your issues.

Answered By DataDoctor21 On

Given that your SSD is at 80% health and causing BSODs, it’s probably best to only use it temporarily. Unallocating space won’t really fix the underlying problems. Make a backup and look to replace it soon.

GamerGal123 -

Thanks, I’ll backup my data!

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