1. Heat:
Providing sufficient cooling can ensure that the SSD doesn’t overheat, keeping it from failing or throttling down to a slower speed. The challenge is finding a way to draw heat away from the drive.
2. Firmware failure
SSD firmware is incredibly complex and many SSD failures tend to be a corner case — a problem that occurs only outside of normal operating parameters.
Firmware problem happens from time to time. Last November, for instance, Hewlett Packard Enterprise issued a customer bulletin warning that its SSD Firmware Version HPD8 needed a critical fix.
3. Misuse
The most common form of SSD misuse is wearing out a drive prematurely because it wasn’t properly matched to the data center workload
Model your workload and figure out which SSD is best.
4. Lurking problems
SSD problems usually don’t become apparent until they begin causing major trouble. The sooner you know there’s a problem, the faster you can respond to the situation and minimize the impact.
The best you can hope for is a loss of the ability to write to the drive, but retaining the ability to read from it.