[ The PC Guide | Troubleshooting
and Repair Guide | Repairs, Returns and Refunds | Determining the Feasibility of Repair ]
System and Component Life
To help you assess your situation when hardware problems occur, I have included in this
section a table that lists the major component types and some typical information
about their likelihood of experiencing an "infant mortality" (early failure),
reliable use lifespan, and how much time they are generally considered at or near the
cutting edge technologically.
Now, putting together a table of this sort isn't easy, because everyone's PC is
different and there is absolutely no way that you can conclude from what's in this section
that your hard disk will last X years or anything like that. So please don't send
me email asking why your particular unit didn't last as long as it says here, or I'll just
end up taking this section out. :^P The table below is not clear-cut. It is not absolute,
and I have no hard data to back it up. It is just my subjective impressions based on using
a large amount of older hardware and seeing how it tends to hold up. I hope that's now
clear. :^)
Here are some assumptions and notes about the table below:
- I am assuming that you are dealing with high-quality, name-brand components. Obviously
if you use junk, you're going to end up with more problems.
- "Infant Mortality Rate" is a relative indicator. A value of
"High" just means that that component is more likely to experience an early
failure than a component with a value of "Low". Even the "High" items
really don't fail all that often.
- "Typical Time to Wearout" gives an indicator of how many years a component of
this sort will last before you can expect to see the rate of failure increase. In other
words, the serviceable useful life of the component before you enter the wearout period. In practice, this depends a lot
on how well you take care of your equipment, how much you use it, and also on how lucky
you are.
- "Likelihood of Obsolescence Before Wearout" gives an indication of how prone
the component is to becoming obsolete due to advances in technology. In turn, this says
how likely most people are to want to replace a failed component of this type with a new
one that is more advanced. In practice, this depends entirely on what is important to you,
of course. I'm not a big believer in replacing good components just because they're no
longer the latest and greatest, but I don't think repairing obsolete equipment makes much
sense in many cases either.
- The longest time value is "7+" years. It gets very dicey beyond that time
period to even guess at what will happen.
Here's the table:
Component |
Infant Mortality Rate |
Typical Time to
Wearout (years) |
Likelihood of
Failure Before Wearout |
Likelihood of
Obsolescence Before Wearout |
Power Supply |
Low |
3-6 |
Moderate |
Very Low |
Motherboard |
Moderate |
4-7 |
Low |
High |
Processor |
Low |
7+ |
Very Low |
Very High |
System Memory |
Moderate to High |
7+ |
Very Low |
High |
Video Card |
Low to Moderate |
5-7 |
Low |
High |
Monitor |
Low to Moderate |
5-7+ |
Moderate to High |
Very Low |
Hard Disk Drive |
Moderate to High |
3-5 |
Moderate to High |
Moderate |
Floppy Disk Drive |
Low |
7+ |
Low |
Low |
CD-ROM Drive |
Moderate |
3-5 |
Moderate |
High |
Modem |
Low |
5-7+ |
Low |
High |
Keyboard |
Very Low |
3-5 |
Moderate |
Low |
Mouse |
Very Low |
1-4 |
Moderate to High |
Very Low |
Next: Reparability of Various Components
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