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Thread ID: 149097 2020-06-23 19:56:00 Windows 2004 Defragging SSD's Lawrence (2987) Press F1
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1469819 2020-06-28 09:55:00 I hesitate because I might have this wrong too... but I believe when SSD's fail the data is normally still able to be read, but you can no longer write to them.
At least that's the claim I remember from the early days of SSDs
dugimodo (138)
1469820 2020-06-28 23:35:00 I hesitate because I might have this wrong too... but I believe when SSD's fail the data is normally still able to be read, but you can no longer write to them.
At least that's the claim I remember from the early days of SSDs

Not on the M.2 (similar thing) that failed .
I had quite a few read errors trying to recover the data from it.
1101 (13337)
1469821 2020-06-29 00:18:00 I hesitate because I might have this wrong too... but I believe when SSD's fail the data is normally still able to be read, but you can no longer write to them.
At least that's the claim I remember from the early days of SSDs

You may be thinking of certain Intel SSDs which go into a read-only mode when a certain number of lifetime bytes written is exceeded.
www.intel.com

Or at least, are supposed to. However, due to potential firmware bugs or bad design, these may or may not completely brick themselves on a following reboot.
Agent_24 (57)
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