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William
16-02-2012, 5:33pm
Do you leave them plugged in ? Or just connect via USB when needed for data transfer and storage

ameerat42
16-02-2012, 5:51pm
I tend to do the latter, William. After all, they have got an MTBF. Actually, mine's always plugged in via USB but not always switched on. And (I think) it saves USB bandwidth.
Am.

William
16-02-2012, 5:52pm
:rolleyes: Cant be that hard a question , Just wondering what you Tech guys do ?

William
16-02-2012, 5:56pm
OK Cross post AM, What the bloody hell are you talking about , I'm A Noob at this type of thing , Whats a MTBF, You mean keep it connected , But switch it off , It's a WD 1 trbit My Book Essiential

mikew09
16-02-2012, 6:14pm
Hi Bill, I have two external WD 1 Tb drives that I mirror - both self powered thought. One stays connected and the other is often stored in my book case just in case someone who needs a drive more than me borrows it :-( if you know what i mean, Not used to that type of thing in the country but it has started happening as farms are turned into suburbs and town grows closer. We even have graffiti in Lowood now, who would have thought :-). back to the topic.

I run all my usb via an external powered hub so power to drive the usb is a bit more isolated from the PC. The USB is nothing more than a media channel that allows data to flow over it, no different to having the internal drive read write logic being run through the system apart for speed.

I see not requirement to disconnect the drives unless you want to secure one when not about, you experience boot up issues with resource assignments of hardware at bootup which is not at all common these days with Windows 7 and Mac systems or you are powering all from the USB port on the PC, then you may want to consider the power tht the PC is pushing out to power external devices, although the supply in the PC may meet the rating for all the USB ports on the box it may shorten the life of the power supply in the pc. Having said that, most of us upgrade our pc's well before any component gives up the ghost :-)

Hope tht helps mate.

William
16-02-2012, 6:33pm
Thanks Mike , I'll plug it in when needed , The Pooter struggles on start up when connected , Whats windows 7, I'm still running XP SP2 :Doh:I'm running a new mother board , An Intel G620 with 4 gb of ram , Nothing special I know , Thanks for the info

Boofhead
16-02-2012, 6:34pm
G'day Bill, I leave my three plugged in and turned on 24/7. One is USB has been going for over 2 years no issues, backs up each night about 11:00pm. The other is 2tb wifi that backs up whenever it feels like it. It is continually saving my work as I modify anything. Been running about 18mths with no issues. Hope I haven't just jinxed myself by writing this :o

mikew09
16-02-2012, 7:19pm
Thanks Mike , I'll plug it in when needed , The Pooter struggles on start up when connected , Whats windows 7, I'm still running XP SP2 :Doh:I'm running a new mother board , An Intel G620 with 4 gb of ram , Nothing special I know , Thanks for the info

Just onother thing to consider Bill, my drive are set to sleep after about 20 mins on non access - pretty much the same as unplugging. If you can configure this on the drives it may meet your requirements.

mikew09
16-02-2012, 7:20pm
G'day Bill, I leave my three plugged in and turned on 24/7. One is USB has been going for over 2 years no issues, backs up each night about 11:00pm. The other is 2tb wifi that backs up whenever it feels like it. It is continually saving my work as I modify anything. Been running about 18mths with no issues. Hope I haven't just jinxed myself by writing this :o

Hey Andrew, I have thought about going a WiFi dock for my drives and storing them out of site but thought the data transfer may be a bit ordinary. Do you find data transfer is that much less than the new bit rate of USB?

ameerat42
16-02-2012, 9:23pm
OK Cross post AM, What the bloody hell are you talking about , I'm A Noob at this type of thing , Whats a MTBF, You mean keep it connected , But switch it off , It's a WD 1 trbit My Book Essiential

Hmm! It wasn't supposed to be that bad, but,

MTBF is mean time before failure. A product has a certain average lifespan, so it helps to not have it running all the time if you don't need to.
I have the drive always hooked in to a USB port - which may be irrelevant - but then only switch it on when I need it.

Am.

Boofhead
16-02-2012, 9:53pm
Hey Andrew, I have thought about going a WiFi dock for my drives and storing them out of site but thought the data transfer may be a bit ordinary. Do you find data transfer is that much less than the new bit rate of USB?

Hi Mike, my external drives are only doing backups in the background. The wifi unit is an Apple time capsule which doubles as a wifi base station. I have only had to access it once or twice to retrieve something and it seems pretty quick to me. I haven't done a large file transfer while I waited so the speed is fine for my use. Easy setup, easy to use and works seamlessly with my pc as well.

etherial
16-02-2012, 10:24pm
I have a 1TB WD My Book Essential and I only plug it in when I'm using it which is usually only when importing photos to Lightroom, I make a copy of them on the external drive straight away in case the worst happens. I'm thinking about getting a second one for off site rather than the slow upload to the cloud.

mini696
16-02-2012, 10:25pm
I have three... A Raid drive always plugged in but not always turned on. Plus two smaller ones for backup of irreplaceable files, one stays in my drawer, the other at my parents (I swap them from time to time).

Xenedis
16-02-2012, 10:35pm
I don't keep my external HDDs connected unless I need them.

I have four, three of which are used for backups (two on-site and one off-site).

The fourth disk is a spare which currently isn't used.

Given my only computer is a laptop, it's not practical to have peripherals connected when they're not needed.

If I had a desktop machine (I stopped using those in 2006), I'd keep a disk permanently connected so that Time Machine could run backups automatically as it was intended to do.

etherial
16-02-2012, 10:40pm
Just come across a cheap Network Storage. I know this model is almost 3 years old now, but hey 1TB NAS for $85 is pretty darn good still!

http://www.msy.com.au/

rodw
16-02-2012, 10:57pm
With expanding file sizes , I have put in a NAS on my home network which has 5 drive bays but currently I only have 2x 3 TB Mirrored drives installed. There are a few NAS brands so do a bit of homework. Mine has a data sync app that runs on my PC to back up in real time and it has let my iPad print in a non Apple environment.

I might add, you really need to have be a hard wired network and I wired my house as part of this project so everything is now Gb networks everywhere but wireless is still in the mix too. The NAS is connected to the switch with 2 x Gb trunked network points so it has 2 Gb of bandwidth so it never gets saturated with a few users.

This might not be for everyone but I think it is much better than the external HDD I used to use.

tcdev
17-02-2012, 6:29pm
I tend to do the latter, William. After all, they have got an MTBF. Actually, mine's always plugged in via USB but not always switched on. And (I think) it saves USB bandwidth.
Am.
Google published a study on hard drive failures with some rather surprising and remarkable results. Especially relevant to this thread; "failure rates did not correspond to drive usage except in very young and old drives". Having said that, I still tend to take my external drives off-line when I'm not using them.

As for USB bandwidth; it depends. Generally every pair of USB ports on a PC share a USB root hub. So the total theoretical bandwidth for the (v1.0/1.1/2.0/etc) root hub is already shared between the two ports. But USB also has a bandwidth allocation scheme, whereby different devices will (only) utilise part of the total bandwidth; exactly how much may be dictated by the other device(s) on the same root hub. For example, a USB mouse will get guaranteed bandwidth on a hub, whilst a drive on the same hub will only be allocated any remaining bandwidth; ie. it can't degrade the mouse performance. OTOH two drives on the same hub will compete for bandwidth.

Of course, plugging two drives into ports on different root hubs will not affect one-another in any way - at least not in respect to USB performance.

Xenedis
19-02-2012, 1:46pm
It could be argued that the mechanical activity associated with powering up and down a drive (ie, spinning up the platters) could be more 'stressful' on the mechanics of that drive than leaving it powered all the time, but despite that, I am recluctant to leave external disks connected to my laptop other than when I am using them (such as the Time Machine backup I'm running right now).

While a drive is connected, there exists the possibility for damage to the drive either through user error (ie, accidentally deleting content), or power surges. For those susceptible to computer viruses and other malware, that is also a threat.

I have a surge suppressor connected to the AC mains from which my machine draws power, and I recommend the use of one; but during electrical storms, I still disconnect the mains power just to be safe. Common sense is a far more effective method of electrical safety than a surge suppressor.

Given I use a laptop only, the battery is essentially a form of UPS. Of course, if the power is disconnected due to a storm or other electricity failure, we're offline, as the router and cable modem won't have power.

Using an HSPA dongle would get around that in most cases, but unfortunately my need for an HSPA dongle is so infrequent that it's not worth investing in one; and unfortunately the pre-paid dongles all expire after a short timeframe. If they had no expiry date, I'd buy one and just keep it for when I need it.

William
19-02-2012, 5:36pm
:eek: I went looking today to answer some questions , Had a look on www.wdc.com (http://www.wdc.com) seeing no instructions or Install disc came with the hard drive , Anybody interested , that has a WD My Book Essentials PDF file might come in handy , Gonna take a while to get my head around this http://www.wdc.com/wdproducts/library/UM/ENG/4779-705053.pdf, Did'nt think there was so much in them :confused013

Xenedis
19-02-2012, 5:46pm
Bill,

External HDDs generally don't come with software on CD/DVD, or printed instructions.

You'll find that the software and 'readme' files are actually on the HDD itself. There'll be some sort of .exe installer for whatever software came with the disk.

I never use any of thar stuff, though; it's just a disk. I format new disks in my OS's native format, and then do my backups.

Xenedis
19-02-2012, 6:11pm
One thing I neglected to mention is that external HDDs are almost always formatted for use on Windows systems.

You can buy external HDDs which come packaged with the "for Mac" nomenclature, but all this means is that they are pre-formatted using Mac OS X's native filesystem format, and probably include Mac versions of the backup software (or whatever comes with them).

Annoyingly, I've seen that 'for Mac' versions are more expensive, and really, there's no reason for that condition to exist.

Disks are just magnetic platters, which can be formatted using whatever filesystem your OS supports. Formatting a disk is a simple exercise.

If you wish to use the HDD manufacturer's software, a version for your OS can be downloaded from the manufacturer's Web site.

My advice to Mac users is not to bother with 'for Mac' versions, particularly if they're more expensive than the Windows versions.

Disks are OS-agnostic. What matters is the formatting you apply, and the availability of software (if you need it) for your OS.

As per my previous post, I don't use any of that software; I just want a big, plain disk.

ameerat42
19-02-2012, 6:28pm
It's usually some backup software, and if you install it you will by default set a certain backup schedule.

I just ignore it and make other folders that I need, but I leave it just in case I might want to install it some day.

Once (ages ago) these HDDs came formatted with FAT32 file system, and you had to "convert" it to something more up-to-date, like NTFS.

BUT I saw in the PDF yours is already NTFS. Since your computer is running XP its HDD is also NTFS, but even if it's not (hard to believe) you could still just plug in the external drive and wait for it to be recognised. Then use away!
Am.

dusty deb
19-02-2012, 6:28pm
Ok, you lost me after about the 3rd post :lol:

William
19-02-2012, 9:10pm
Quote AM : BUT I saw in the PDF yours is already NTFS. Since your computer is running XP its HDD is also NTFS, but even if it's not (hard to believe) you could still just plug in the external drive and wait for it to be recognised. Then use away!
Thanks AM, Thats what I'm doing , When I need it with the computer running I just plug it in and away it goes , When finished before I shut down I just click on the Safely remove icon at the bottom , And alls good , I have'nt installed the stuff that I found that came with it ? Just not keen on Plugging and unplugging the USB Lead thats all , Sorry , I know this sounds like very nooby stuff , Should I try leaving it connected and let it shut down with the computer at the end of the day , Sounds like I cant use the On/Off switch unless I install the Watcha Ma call it thingy

ameerat42
19-02-2012, 9:27pm
About the very last point, William: If you want to switch off your external HDD while you're still working on your computer, you have to first (in XP) "Safely Remove Hardware".
At the bottom right hand side of your desktop task-bar you will see a symbol as shown in the attached image. Click on the drive/hardware you want to disconnect, then wait for the message "Safe to remove...", then switch it off/unplug the USB lead, etc.
Am.

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