Ditto on Pi taking more amps than advertised. Another catch though are
counterfeit SD cards. I only recently learned about them from a friend and
YouTube video but they can get into online stores sometimes without the
seller even knowing. I ended up finding two of mine bought from ham radio
expo are counterfeit. They were labelled 32GB and generic/bulk packaging.
However any more than 8GB will be corrupt so they're really 8 and the other
sectors will either be corrupt or overwrite the original sectors.
It's interesting that it doesn't report errors so the OS is fine writing to
the sectors. Only way to tell that I've seen I'd actually writing to full
amount of data and confirming all the files are valid.
On Fri, Aug 9, 2019, 6:19 PM Jim MacKenzie via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
wrote:
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Adam
Thornton via cctalk
Sent: Friday, August 9, 2019 3:44 PM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <
cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Raspberry Pi write cycles
I did have a case where the Pi I was using as secondary DNS/DHCP and as
the secondary backup server (using USB spinning disk) destroyed its SD card.
But then it turned out not to be the load at all. No matter what I ran on
that Pi, it would corrupt its SD cards in a matter of weeks (the symptom
was that the fourth bit of some bytes would just stick on). I assume it
was just something broken in the Pi itself.
===
The usual cause of this is an insufficiently beefy power supply. Every Pi
that I ever had that ate SD cards ceased the habit when I put a better
supply on it.
Jim