Jump to content

External Hard Drive Issue


Oracle

Recommended Posts

An interesting development in the last few days.

 

Recently, one of my external hard drives I connect to my desktop has started making a sound similar to that of sucking something out of a straw, not a click, but more of a sucking noise. If I put my hand on top of it and sit it there for a moment, it's as if I can feel it, well, clicking.

 

Is the drive failing, should I be worried about this? If it is, what is the fix?

 

Not worried about losing data, as it is all backed up across two other hard drives, and not worried about having to replace it, as I have a few spare drives as well.

 

Just curious about what could be causing this and how it could be fixed.

 

It's a relatively new drive, as in bought in May 2018.

 

Thanks.

 

EDIT: Forgot to mention, this issue happens on and off, but regularly throughout the day.

Edited by SPRINKLES-PC
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, buddy. Appreciated. 

 

For future projects/upgrades, what would my best option be for continual activity?

I've run Emby for the past year or so with no HDD issues beforehand.

 

These drives are off a majority of the night, normally off at 2AM and back on again at around 8AM-9AM. Once on, they aren't often off until the automatic shut-down at 2AM.

 

For life expectancy and continual activity, what would my best route to take?

 

I'm tech-savvy and rather interested in this stuff. Just learning as I go, really. These forums help loads.

 

@

Edited by SPRINKLES-PC
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest asrequested

Using a NAS is probably best for your setup. There are a range of choices, or if you have an old PC sitting around, you could turn that into a NAS.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

BAlGaInTl

Using a NAS is probably best for your setup. There are a range of choices, or if you have an old PC sitting around, you could turn that into a NAS.

 

I would add that the use of enterprise drives or drives designed for NAS will help as well.  They may not be as fast, but have higher reliability.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...