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LesserChaos's avatar
LesserChaos
Rising Novice
4 months ago

Game crashed, killed M2 SSD (no bootable device)

Drive is: Samsung 9100 PRO 2 TB

So, I would love to add propper attachments and files and screenshots, but as title says my entire SSD i had installed and played BF6 on died when the game crashed.

I was not doing anything unusual, just some breakthrough on Seige on Cairo and then suddenly, the entire ssd was gone. It was just a 5 month old ssd and propper heat dispursal is installed

I have read through a lot of tried a lot of suggestions, but it seems the drive is dead.

  • Disabling EXPO
  • Running in CSM
  • Resetting secure boot keys
  • Updating bios
  • Waiting 5+ mintues in bios
  • Pulling out CMOS
  • Reseating the nvme
  • Switching places for the nvme
  • Reseating ram, gpu, cpu
  • Tried a different pc, the drive is still not recognized

Seems BF6 might have just fried my nvme :/

15 Replies

  • LesserChaos's avatar
    LesserChaos
    Rising Novice
    4 months ago

    This was probably my straw, ill look into a more secure long term backup plan after this issue has been resolved. Ill look into the 3-2-1 rule! Thanks

  • Zatick_NZ's avatar
    Zatick_NZ
    Rising Traveler
    4 months ago

    That model had 2GB of DRAM cache, maybe that's what got you :)

  • LesserChaos's avatar
    LesserChaos
    Rising Novice
    4 months ago

    Looked into this a bit more. This seems to be one of the testing methods, seems like they also test under hotter conditions and other forms of stress tests. I would find it quite disturbing if the only test they conducted was a "normal" temperature test before approving devices

  • Zatick_NZ's avatar
    Zatick_NZ
    Rising Traveler
    4 months ago

    Who knows what tests Samsung runs. That's where the greyness comes in, as far as I could find SSD manufacturers were not obligated to test to the JEDEC standard, and they only HAD to test to that standard if they specifically made a claim in their literature that they DID test to that standard. If they didn't test to that standard, I don't know of any other mainstream ones, so what do they test to, the answer is whatever they want...

    Samsung generally make a quality product, they have had some really crap firmware on some models that have given issues, but in general if the firmware is good the drives are reliable. The point was more that the endurance rating is probably something very different than most people expect, unless they've read up on how companies arrive at those figures.

    Edit: Actually, I did know that Samsung is one of the manufacturers that does test to the JEDEC standard, and their datasheet for this model says as much "documented endurance test results are in compliance with JESD218 Standards.". Lots don't though, and it really blurs things if you're comparing one manufacturer to another. 

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