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PowerGamerX

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Aug 9, 2009
673
1
Ok, I've got my MacBook Air, it's great, but, I have no plans to buy another computer for at least 2 years. So, under normal to heavy drive use, will the SSD hold up for that time?
 

Hellhammer

Moderator emeritus
Dec 10, 2008
22,164
582
Finland
SSDs have expected life time of ~100 years (Mean Time Before Failure) but those are just guesses, too early to say which is the average and in the end, it depends on your luck.

It should last several years
 

LAS.mac

macrumors 6502
May 6, 2009
363
0
Mexico
Both Maclife (Jun or Jul issue) and Macworld (Aug issue) have interesting trials and discussions about SSD.
 

TMRaven

macrumors 68020
Nov 5, 2009
2,099
1
They'll last just as long or longer than hard drives, let's put it that way.
 

abriwin

macrumors member
Apr 1, 2009
96
0
SSD V HD life

Theoretically an SSD should last longer as it has no moving parts to wear out?
 

PowerGamerX

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Aug 9, 2009
673
1
Theoretically an SSD should last longer as it has no moving parts to wear out?

I'm not asking how long they'll last without use. Since, as far as I know, SSD's use flash and have a limited ammount of reads/writes per block, they should last less long?
 

Airforcekid

macrumors 68000
Sep 29, 2008
1,708
680
United States of America
I'm not asking how long they'll last without use. Since, as far as I know, SSD's use flash and have a limited ammount of reads/writes per block, they should last less long?

I have flashed my thumb drive thousands of times booted Linux portable apps etc had it for years no issues I would expect 10 years with an SSD no problem unless or defrag or something like that in windows.
 

MikhailT

macrumors 601
Nov 12, 2007
4,583
1,327
To help everybody understand, good-high end SSDs will last far longer than the cheap SSDs due to the nature of the wear leveling design, write amplification and finally the quality and type of the NANDs (SLC/MLC).

First of all, all NANDs have finite WRITE lifespan, not READ. They can have unlimited read lifespan, it doesn't take much to read. Write lifespan is dependent on which NAND type it is and the quality of it.

SLC: Single Layer Cell, MLC: Multiple Layer Cell, it means one bit is written per cell for SLC where as MLC can have multiple bits per cell, the highest right now is 3 bit but it's not out on the market right now.

SLC can have 100,000 P/E cycles (Program and Erase), meaning it can be written 100,000 times before it can no longer be written, what this mean that while you can still read those data, you can no longer write to it. Unlike HDD, once a sector is dead, you can't read data off it.

MLC are now around 5,000-10,000 P/E cycles depending on the quality of it. (

The smaller the the capacity of the SSD, the faster that P/E cycle get used up per cell, which means 30GB SSD will die "gracefully" much faster than a 120GB SSD. However understand that, in order for the SSD to die completely, each cell has to be dead or the controller itself crapped out.
What this mean is that 30GB will decline in capacity for writing capacity. Suddenly 30GB becomes 29.8GB only, slowly dying over time yet all data is still there.

Good SSDs usually have extra reserve of NANDs for this purpose as well, 60GB probably have 4GB of NANDs in reserve for multiple purposes.

So a good 30GB MLC SSD can last 3-5 full years of hardcore usage (24/7 intensive workload). The same SSD but with SLC NANDs will last far far more than that, maybe 10-20 years. 60GB MLC would probably last far more than 10 years. 120GB should last 20+, 1TB would last a century.
 

thinkdesign2

macrumors newbie
Jun 23, 2010
14
0
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows CE; IEMobile 7.11) Sprint PPC6850SP)

MikhailT: So, in your opinion, is the SSD in the current 2.13 Air (or the same size SSD in the older 1.86 Air)... of the type you call "good"?
 

robeddie

Suspended
Jul 21, 2003
1,777
1,731
Atlanta
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows CE; IEMobile 7.11) Sprint PPC6850SP)

MikhailT: So, in your opinion, is the SSD in the current 2.13 Air (or the same size SSD in the older 1.86 Air)... of the type you call "good"?

Yeah, really.

He takes up through the whole friggin' science course, but in the end doesn't tell us what we really want to know.

Come on dude!
 

MikhailT

macrumors 601
Nov 12, 2007
4,583
1,327
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows CE; IEMobile 7.11) Sprint PPC6850SP)

MikhailT: So, in your opinion, is the SSD in the current 2.13 Air (or the same size SSD in the older 1.86 Air)... of the type you call "good"?

Samsung brand SLC SSD are good and will last a long time, I can't be sure about current Air, I know the original was MCCOE64GEMPP which is SLC. Check your system profiler and match it against this, if it doesn't match, let me know and I'll tell you what it is. Samsung don't make low ends. They are excellent and reliable but conservative in their speed in order to ensure stability over performance.

Yeah, really.

He takes up through the whole friggin' science course, but in the end doesn't tell us what we really want to know.

Come on dude!

I think pretty much most students feel the same way about science and math.

I need the exact SSD serial number to know to come up with an answer as I explained in the above post.
 

mmulin

macrumors 6502
Jun 22, 2006
404
0
Ok, I've got my MacBook Air, it's great, but, I have no plans to buy another computer for at least 2 years. So, under normal to heavy drive use, will the SSD hold up for that time?

Yes, it should last you at least double. I have mine now around 2 years. Probably longer than any conventional HDD (and before you snap again, yes under usage). If you asking for exact real life experiences, please understand that the technology is not that long around and the "scientific" evaluations have to be taken the same way as for conventional HDDs.
 

Qusus

macrumors member
Jan 30, 2009
67
0
Only the original Macbook Air used had an SLC SSD.

The 2.13 ghz version that the poster has is a Samsung MLC SSD.
 

mmulin

macrumors 6502
Jun 22, 2006
404
0
Only the original Macbook Air used had an SLC SSD.

The 2.13 ghz version that the poster has is a Samsung MLC SSD.

yes, but that probably won't change the fact that it also will last long enough.
 
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