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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 19th, 2023

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  • It depends much on your handling. If you transport the drive often, i would recommend an SSD, because they are not influenced by vibration, drops etc like an HDD is and will survive a lot of trips in hot and cold. All my dead drives were external HDDs that were transported around.

    If you dont transport it, i would go for an HDD, because it is unbeatable in price per Terrabyte in comparison to an SSD. If you have a reliable 3-2-1 Backup strategy, it will be replaced if it fails, but none of your data is in danger.

    As you said, you want to not needing to be connected to power, this rules out 3,5HDDs and limits you to 2,5HDDs or SSDs. There you pay double for an 4Tb SSD vs 4TB HDD.

    SSDs tend to corrupt Data much faster than HDDs if unpowered for a long time (if archival is more your intention). Lifespan of an SSD is in the TBW, so the more data you write, the sooner it fails. A 4TB Samsung 870 QVO fails after 2880 TBW. A HDD writes ands stores data as long as it mechanically works.

    A HDD stores Data upowered for a longer time and could last Years if handled correctly (i phased out a 2007 drive this year, run daily and still working without problems, just too small).

    i would say, id depends very much on your usecase.

    If you plan to do more of archival saving, rethink your power limitation. 2,5HDDs have right now hit kind of a wall in maximum capacity. if you go 3,5HDDs they are unbeataable in price to size. You get there nearly double the capacity per money spent vs 2,5HDDs, exspecially with bigger drives like 12, 14 or 16TB.