Hello,
On my desktop, I've been getting messages like this in dmesg connected with an 
external USB hard disk. This is a block of them from this morning:

Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 FAILED Result: 
hostbyte=DID_ERROR driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Sense Key : Hardware 
Error [current] [descriptor] 
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Add. Sense: No 
additional sense information
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 CDB: ATA command pass 
through(16) 85 06 2c 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 e5 00
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 FAILED Result: 
hostbyte=DID_ERROR driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Sense Key : Hardware 
Error [current] [descriptor] 
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Add. Sense: No 
additional sense information
Jul 29 10:21:48 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 CDB: ATA command pass 
through(16) 85 06 2c 00 da 00 00 00 00 00 4f 00 c2 00 b0 00
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 FAILED Result: 
hostbyte=DID_ERROR driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Sense Key : Hardware 
Error [current] [descriptor] 
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Add. Sense: No 
additional sense information
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 CDB: ATA command pass 
through(16) 85 06 2c 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 e5 00
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 FAILED Result: 
hostbyte=DID_ERROR driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Sense Key : Hardware 
Error [current] [descriptor] 
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 Add. Sense: No 
additional sense information
Jul 29 10:51:55 pelman kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sdb] tag#0 CDB: ATA command pass 
through(16) 85 06 2c 00 da 00 00 00 00 00 4f 00 c2 00 b0 00

I've been searching on the web (duckduckgo and google), but haven't seen this 
exact situation anywhere. On a bug report I read 
(https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1176355), the person 
mentioned that their disk worked on a previous release, so I attached my disk 
to a laptop that hasn't been updated in a while. It is running Debian unstable 
with linux 4.5.0-2. None of those messages have shown up. I'm running fsck -f 
on it right now to check it (on the laptop).

Thus, I assume there is some change in the kernel code, but that my disk is 
fine. Does that sound reasonable, or has some improvement been introduced in 
the linux code that is picking up problems that 4.5 doesn't see?
Thanks for your time and happy to include further information if it is helpful.

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