Hello,
For the SMART value you'd want to check the following attributes:
5 Reallocated_Sector_Ct[/INDENT]
[INDENT]197 Current_Pending_Sector[/INDENT]
[INDENT]198 Offline_Uncorrectable
If non zero (in the raw value column) then the drive might have some problems.
You might also want to look at:
4 Start_Stop_Count[/INDENT]
[INDENT]9 Power_On_Hours[/INDENT]
[INDENT]12 Power_Cycle_Count[/INDENT]
[INDENT]193 Load_Cycle_Count[/INDENT]
[INDENT]194 Temperature_Celsius
#4 and #12 should be roughly the same or if there is a big difference, probably you'll have #4>#9 (it means the drive was put to sleep but not powered down)
#9 gives you the "age" of the drive, here +4k hours is not even half a year.
#193 indicates how many times the head have been parked
#194 indicates the temperature, if there is a min/max, you'd want to look at the max to see how hot the drive has been
Besides the attributes, you can look if any SMART tests have been run (long or short).
HDD1 shows a long that has been aborted and a short that completed without error.
HDD2 only shows a short, competed without error.
So on these drives, I'd say the numbers look good.
The drive didn't do any long smart tests... that is unfortunate but not necessarily a problem.
The temperature history also looks good with temperature under 40 degrees.
Some attributes can look scary like:
1 Raw_Read_Error_Rate[/INDENT]
[INDENT]7 Seek_Error_Rate
But if I recall right, Seagate has its own way of interpreting them (maybe a member with more experience in Seagate can give more insight here?) so it doesn't mean the disk is bad.
If those are second hand drives you want to buy, I'd also advise to burn them in (like new ones), just to be sure...