But what is if there are no more writing cycles available?I read that if no more writing cycles left the ssd is just readable so this is not good for system partitions or did i understand something wrong?Yes, I would definitely use an SSD for Windows (drive C:\), and you could get another HDD for drive D:
That's what I do. I have a 512GB SSD for my system drive, and then 3TB HDD for data.
The difference between an SSD and a HDD is like night and day. HUGE speed improvement for SSD!
That's nothing you have to worry about. Any disk can eventually wear out, including both SSD and HDD, but if you buy a good quality one, you shouldn't worry. In 2013, I bought a Samsung SSD 840 PRO Drive for my laptop (Wndows C: drive) and never had any problems with it. It was SO MUCH faster than the 1TB HDD drive that came with the laptop, I would never go back to a HDD again (for C: drive). So that's 6 years with no problems. The laptop died but I took out the SSD and it still works fine!But what is if there are no more writing cycles available?I read that if no more writing cycles left the ssd is just readable so this is not good for system partitions or did i understand something wrong?
Yeah,backup and backup is the best method to be on the safe side with data storages.I used 9 SCSI HDDs in raid mode with cache controler and they run pretty fast.That's nothing you have to worry about. Any disk can eventually wear out, including both SSD and HDD, but if you buy a good quality one, you shouldn't worry. In 2013, I bought a Samsung SSD 840 PRO Drive for my laptop (Wndows C: drive) and never had any problems with it. It was SO MUCH faster than the 1TB HDD drive that came with the laptop, I would never go back to a HDD again (for C: drive). So that's 6 years with no problems. The laptop died but I took out the SSD and it still works fine!
In all cases, however, you should always backup your important data regularly. Any hardware can fail. I've had 6 hard disk drives fail on me, so I never trust them.