Reliability at the cell level is the exactly the same. he controller is
exactly the same.

However, having more unused space enhances the wear leveling where cells
get used less often.

It does not however prevent issues with data corruption for any Linux
issues.

Gerald





On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 2:21 PM, Willem Buitendyk <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have about 150 beaglebone's running wild over a large geographical area,
> basically all over British Columbia.  When I first deployed them last year
> they all started failing within about a month.  That amounted to a lot of
> needless driving, hair pulling, forehead banging and just general over
> anxiety - its a wonder I'm still alive.
>
> I eventually ended up using two uSD cards, one with a read only mounted
> filesystem and the other used for writing data (ext4).  My beaglebone's are
> paired with a msp430 so I have managed to ensure they also receive a nice,
> clean power down.  So far its been about a year and I'd say well over 95%
> are still working fine.  However, I recently talked with a tech support
> from an industrial SD card manufacturer and he informed me that SD cards
> that are only ever read to can also fail eventually.  He suggested that you
> write a little bit once in a while to activate the wear levelling
> mechanism.  As things seem to be working (for now) I haven't drummed up the
> courage to try writing again.
>
> Now we have the beaglebone black with 4G eMMC and I'm wondering just how
> much more reliable eMMC is compared to the stock Kingston 4GB cards in read
> only mode that came with the Beaglebone.  I know eMMC is supposed to be
> much improved having an integrated controller but wonder if in a read-only
> scenario it makes any difference? Furthermore,  I wonder if others on here
> can offer any experiences or comparisons of eMMC to say SLC memory?
>
> Thanks
>
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