Macworld

How worried should you be about your M1 Mac’s SSD lifespan?

It’s not something to ignore, but the fact is, SSDS last a lot longer than most people think. Jon Jacobi reports

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Recent reports have shown that some users of M1 Macs are experienci­ng what they feel is unreasonab­le, excessive usage of the SSD. One in particular showed 15TB written in two months. That’s quite a bit, and almost certainly due to swapping main memory to the SSD.

The reports became a cause for alarm for M1 Mac owners, but is it really a problem? While it’s true that

SSDS have a limited lifespan, how long that SSD lasts comes down to how you use your Mac.

SSD LONGEVITY

A common misconcept­ion about SSDS is that they don’t last very long. That’s due partially to the early days of SSDS, when the lifespan of NAND flash storage used on an SSD was severely underestim­ated, and drives often quit after a relatively small amount of use. As it turned out, it was hardly ever the NAND failing, but the controller locking up. The fine art of controller design has come a long way, and I haven’t heard of a failure in years. Many years.

But confusion is also caused by the way vendors rate drives, and user perception­s of just how much data they write. Big hint on the latter: it’s generally far less than you think. Remember, reads don’t put wear on the NAND.

As for vendor ratings, by far the most common stat used for solid state storage is TBW, or the number of Terabytes that may be Written over the life of the drive. Typically, the rating runs around 600TBW for every 1TB of capacity for end-user drives. You might not realize that a ton of temporary files are written then erased on the SSD, including the memory swap that’s the issue with the new M1s

The thing about TBW ratings is that they’re not particular­ly accurate. They’re generally a deliberate underestim­ate of monumental proportion­s. The TBW ratings represent the amount of writes vendors determine they can guarantee and still make a profit at the price they charge. A time period, most often three or five years is also enforced.

If that sounds the way a new car warranty works – Bingo. No person in their right mind would buy a new car thinking that would cease working in five years or 50,000 miles, but that’s a common warranty. SSD TBW ratings are the same deal, a liability/ profit formula that’s conservati­ve to

the max. That’s no guarantee, mind you. (Sorry for the pun drop!)

Note also that SSDS still don’t generally fail once they start wearing out more cells than they have replacemen­ts for (overprovis­ioning is a standard feature), but performanc­e drops and capacity starts shrinking. This depends on the controller and drive, but there is little danger of you losing your data. You just need to copy the data off and replace the SSD.

AS IT RELATES TO M1 MACS

Apple is famously mum about technical details, and hasn’t provided a TBW rating or any other data about the SSD inside the M1 Macs. There are variables such as the type of NAND (SLC, MLC, TLC, or QLC), the amount of DRAM cache, and so on, that can affect lifespan. Since that informatio­n isn’t publicly known, I’ll carry on as if Apple is using a variation on the common TLC SSD. If Apple followed common practice, the 256GB SSD in your M1 Mac would likely be rated for 150TBW. Someone writing 7.5TB per month would exceed the warranty at around 20 months, less than two years. Not good. But wait…

Far more likely – according to the industry scuttlebut­t, my own experience, and third-party testing – is that the 256GB SSD will reach 300TBW with ease, and quite likely more. That means nearly four to eight years of SSD life at the same pace

with an 8GB/256GB M1 Mac. You can double that for a 512GB SSD.

A drive’s SMART function generally reports usage as a percentage of the TBW rating, so you can apply this rated versus real lifespan formula to that as well. A

1 per cent usage might in reality be only 0.25 per cent.

Way back in 2014, The Tech Report found that some 256GB drives were capable of reaching almost one petabyte worth of writes. Those drives used older, longer-lived 1-bit/slc NAND rather than today’s common 3-bit/tlc. The 2-bit/mlc drives in the tests tended to dropout at around 700TBW in the same tests.

TLC is said to be even less durable, but SSD vendors have developed all sorts of techniques for prolonging life since then. Note that you can treat any kind of NAND as NAND with less cells, which can also increase lifespan. For all we know, Apple may be using TLC and treating it as MLC, or flat out using MLC.

THE GREY AREA

What’s not entirely clear is the relation between workload, memory, and how much macos swaps to the SSD. I can tell you that it’s a lot more than Windows. My work Intel imac with 16GB of memory dual-boots to Windows and macos on separate internal drives. I spend a good 95 per cent of my time using Windows (my music imac is where I spend all my time in macos), yet the drive only shows 8TBW, while the far less-used macos drive shows almost 17TBW.

What is also clear from other studies is that the more memory you have the less you have to swap it to the SSD. The M1’s memory management is no doubt more efficient than that of Intel Mac’s, but it can’t work miracles. When it’s time to swap, it’s time to swap, and that may be due to heavy-duty creative work or simply having a lot of memoryhung­ry programs open at once.

LESS IS NOT MORE…

What we’ve establishe­d is that macos pounds the SSD pretty hard and the less memory you have, the more it pounds. But it’s also very likely that the SSD will last far, far longer than most think.

Apple does have a bit of a rep for making stuff obsolete before what some users feel is its time (another reason for the current concern). Still, I think that if you buy according to the traditiona­l formula, you’ll get the lifespan you want (many years).

For general use and workloads, 8GB of memory and a 256GB

SSD is fine. For heavier use, 16GB of memory and a 512GB SSD is preferable. For super heavy usage (creative pro or developers), use external storage for scratch space with apps that support it, or wait for the upcoming, beefier pro Macs.

Apple could’ve done everyone a favour by spelling all this out, though I can almost understand a reluctance to pour cold water on the initial giddy reporting. More likely, the company thought it was so obvious, they didn’t have to explain it. I’d still like the company to chime in and make my assessment official. Or debunk it if that’s required. The truth will come out, eventually.

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 ??  ?? Samsung’s 980 Pro is a typical end-user SSD, ‘rated’ for 600TBW for every 1TB of capacity.
Samsung’s 980 Pro is a typical end-user SSD, ‘rated’ for 600TBW for every 1TB of capacity.
 ??  ?? Apple’s M1 Mac Mini is fast, but overused, does it kill its SSD? Probably not. The average user should see 15 years or more of life from the SSD, even though it’s guaranteed for far less.
Apple’s M1 Mac Mini is fast, but overused, does it kill its SSD? Probably not. The average user should see 15 years or more of life from the SSD, even though it’s guaranteed for far less.

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