A spare drive should be periodically re-certified to ensure it is ready for immediate use if a drive in your RAID fails. Drives that sit unused for long periods can develop latent issues that may not be detected until the drive is placed into service.
Re-Certification Intervals
We recommend the following re-certification schedules based on usage environment:
- Mission-critical environments: Re-certify spare drives every 3–6 months
- Professional environments: Re-certify spare drives every 6–12 months
- Prosumer or home use: Re-certify spare drives once per year
A spare drive that has not been re-certified within these timeframes should not be assumed to be deployment-ready.
Why Re-Certification Matters
Drives degrade while idle:
- Lubricants in HDDs can settle or deteriorate
- Flash cells in SSDs can lose charge over time
- Firmware issues may develop
- Manufacturing defects may only appear under load
Re-certification ensures:
- The drive can still reliably read and write across its entire surface
- No new bad sectors or reallocated sectors have appeared
- The drive is truly ready for immediate deployment when needed
Storage Best Practices for Spare Drives
For HDDs:
- Store in a cool, dry environment
- Keep in anti-static bags if removed from enclosure
- Avoid extreme temperature changes
For SSDs:
- Store with at least 50% charge/data written
- Power on and connect once every 6 months (even if not certifying)
- SSDs can lose data if left unpowered for extended periods (6-12 months)
Important: RAID is Not a Backup
While RAID protects against individual drive failures, it does not protect against:
- Accidental deletion
- File corruption
- Malware or ransomware
- Site-wide disasters (fire, flood, theft)
- User error
We strongly recommend the 3-2-1 backup rule:
- Maintain at least 3 copies of your data
- Keep 2 copies on-site (e.g., RAID + separate backup drive)
- Keep 1 copy off-site (cloud backup or physically separate location)
Using both RAID and proper backups provides the best protection for important data.
