<div dir="ltr">I've recently been using 'hdparm' to configure my hard-drives to spin-down after 5 minutes of idle time. This works well and is handled automatically after adding the 'hdparm' calls to the /etc/rc.d/rc.local script. Live TV is recorded to my primary boot drive which will not spin down, and all other recordings are saved to two larger drives that may spindown after inactivity. My goal is to save power, reduce noise, and reduce wear on the drives; you know, the usual.<br>
<br>So, my question is: does the delay in spinning the drives up to record a program cause any portion of the program to be lost? I know that I might be able to check by looking at the duration of the recorded files, but I figured I might ask here first. Is the content buffered before being written to file? If so, how large is the buffer (or, how long are the drives permitted to spin up)?<br>
<br>Thanks in advance,<br><br>--<br>Scott Kidder<br></div>