Hi, Larry.
You're welcome. I try to take opportunities as they arise to "keep up" with S.M.A.R.T. as best I can.
You've seen my hypothesis in an effort to answer the question — i.e., that your drive isn't dying: it intermittently gets hot enough to cause the 190 "failed" datum to be reported, then cools again. (Real? a sensor problem? determining which would be a
real diagnostic challenge.) In my own lingo, a "predictive" data point of a
potential (but not imminent) unpredictable failure. Fwiw.
I'll be interested to hear whether WD
ever proves willing to venture an opinion on this without having the drive in hand (
they'll think about issues like OEM, liabilitiy, etc...)
As to why TTP differs, I was implying that, AFAIK, the reason is that TTP provides detailed reporting rather than a single "S.M.A.R.T. status: Verified" datum as others do. Micromat_Tech3 explained the attributes available in TTP's "S.M.A.R.T. Self-Checks" in
this thread from last March. I tend to doubt this is a TTP issue — all the software is doing is polling data that the drive sends. I haven't seen documentation of what "decision tree" Disk Utility, SMARTReporter, etc. may use to coalesce all the attributes into a single "failing" or "verified" statement. I'd be ~surprised if they showed "failing" for an "unknown" or temperature value that varies. Imo, that's your answer...
Btw — oops! Sorry — the link toward the end of my post should've been to the
Using your iMac G5 forum. I guess your "two months ago" statement overwhelmed "(PPC)" in my aging brain when I read it. Please forgive...
I was checking whether Marcel Bresink's
Temperature Monitor is Universal Binary/Intel-compliant when I realized my error. (It is — not that it matters to you.) Anyway, you might want to check out this shareware utility. It also offers "immediate" monitoring. Not knowing the specifics of your sensors, I don't know what it may enlighten — but I think you can "test drive" on a trial basis...
—Dean
Edit: The WD person's reply isn't a big surprise — for Macs in general, but particularly for drives that are marketed as OEM. (i.e., when support is typically binding only on Apple and not on the OEM.) But persist — my bet is that WD will be the source of an answer if you can get to the right tech. person. You could always try contacting AppleCare, and trying to reach the "product specialist" level of expertise there — but they didn't make the drive...
Btw... not to be critical, Larry — but if you already knew all this, why didn't you include/reference it yourself in the beginning of the thread? Perhaps I'm over-reacting to "the closest bit of relevant info that I've found" — but I consider [≥most of] the links provided by myself and others closely relevant, too. Trying to help here, you realize...