kaple.blogg.se

Raid crystaldiskinfo
Raid crystaldiskinfo










raid crystaldiskinfo

CrystalDiskInfo is an analysis tool for SSD (SolidStateDisk) and HDD (hard disks / HardDiskDrives).ĬrystalDiskInfo is an HDD health monitoring utility.

raid crystaldiskinfo

The thing is, SmartFan does the same thing as CrystalDisc, no detection or readings on C: and F.Download CrystalDiskInfo - A handy HDD/SSD utility software that supports a part of USB connection and Intel RAID. Nonetheless CrystalDisc says E: is 53 too, so I'm guessing it's due to the testing, because it usually stays in the 30s or at least that's what the temp sensors glued to the drive say, but CrystalDisc says about 8 or more degrees hotter. I just tried SmartFan for HDD temps and it read E: as 53 degrees, which kinda bothers me, because I'm pretty sure this set-up is over-cooled, for what I do to it(2 120mm on the side one in one out, 2 120mm fans on top, 1 200 or 230mm fan in front and a 120mm push/pull liquid radiator on the back) and the hottest I've been able to get cores on CoreTemp is 35-37 (running multiple, 5-10, media players with super high bitrate 10bit 1080p vids with 7.1 FLAC audio, which are exclusively CPU decoded) and it usually idles at 22 degrees. I have CoreTemp, but I can't find anything like HDD Temp.

raid crystaldiskinfo

Oh yeah, is there anything like CrystalDisc that will give me the temps on the individual HDDs. What it all comes down to, is that I might just be a little anal retentive, but I would much rather just toss that TB onto another drive and RMA the thing before I lose that TB, have to RMA it anyway, then having to re-download that entire TB of crap off the net. When I said that drive sounds and acts weird, I meant that on start up, its spin up sounds a little different than the other 4 identical Seagates and sometimes it takes a little longer, I think. Even a corruption of a couple bits or bytes (yes I do know the difference between those, but I'm not sure how much actually has to be corrupted for the CRC fail), as far as I know will make a file fail the CRC. I tested every file and not a single one failed the CRC test, which means there's no corruption in anything on that drive. I also don't think it is screwed in any way, since that entire drive has only 100 GB free out of the 931 GB it can hold and EVERYTHING on that drive is video media files that are all CRC tagged. Unless the long test says it's somehow screwed, that doesn't make any sense to me, not that I'm even remotely savvy when it comes to these things. They are also both plugged into SATA III ports. That's drive F.Į: & F: are identical drives, bought at the same time, they came from the same factory and are even out of the same production batch. Notice how one is recognized as a Seagate SCSI Device and the other is just labeled as an ATA Device without even the Seagate tag? Yet they both have the same Model Numbers.












Raid crystaldiskinfo