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Resolved Hard Drive Failed

Discussion in 'PC Hardware' started by JohnB, 2009/06/24.

  1. 2009/06/24
    JohnB Lifetime Subscription

    JohnB Well-Known Member Thread Starter

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    Just had my slave hard ( "E ") drive fail or start to fail. In the event veiwer I get this message:

    Event Type: Error
    Event Source: Disk
    Event Category: None
    Event ID: 7
    Date: 6/24/2009
    Time: 4:57:26 PM
    User: N/A
    Computer: GORDSTOY
    Description:
    The device, \Device\Harddisk1\D, has a bad block

    and from the MS help site:

    ID: 7
    Source: Disk
    Version: 5.2
    Symbolice Name: IO_ERR_BAD_BLOCK
    Message: The device, %1, has a bad block.

    Fortunately this is my E: "backup" hard drive so OS and all original programs and data on C: drive is still OK.

    I have tried formatting the E drive but it only gets to 45% then stops. A quick format will work but obviously does not get rid of the bad block.

    My question is: Is there any chance of repairing this drive and how would I go about it?
     
  2. 2009/06/25
    Christer

    Christer Geek Member Staff

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    I would search the manufacturers site for disk management tools. After running the appropriate tool, if the problem seems to be fixed, I would delete and recreate the partition and do a normal format.
     

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  4. 2009/06/25
    PeteC

    PeteC SuperGeek Staff

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  5. 2009/06/25
    mattman

    mattman Inactive Alumni

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    Run Error Checking (CHKDSK) on the drive. Get it to scan the surface for bad sectors (CHKDSK E: /r). It may take a long time, so set it to run overnight.

    That will mark the sectors as bad, but it does not "fix" the drive. The surrounding disk media will keep breaking down and further bad sectors will appear. A drive I still have had bad sectors from a power blackout. I found a program that shows sectors marked as bad (you could see them in the Windows 98 version of Defragmentation) and I was able to format drives on either side of the damaged sectors and leave that section as free space (actually, I made a small drive on the damaged section, then deleted that drive). The damage was sustained around ten years ago. It works fine.

    Matt
     
  6. 2009/06/25
    JohnB Lifetime Subscription

    JohnB Well-Known Member Thread Starter

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    Thanks all for your suggestions, I will try some of them when I get time.:)
     
  7. 2009/06/25
    JohnB Lifetime Subscription

    JohnB Well-Known Member Thread Starter

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    Followup - The Drive Is Dead, Long live a new one.

    Well, I tried all of the suggestions in the previous posts, including mattman's suggestion of isolating the bad sectors. Chkdsk would not complete, got to 42% and stopped, Seagates Diag. software came up with fails. A small app. called "HD Tune" that identified the location of bad blocks showed that from 17500MB to 20000MB was bad and from 32000MB to 39000MB was also bad, a total of 25% of the drive.:eek:

    End result, the drive is now in the trash can and I will be looking to purchase a new one as soon as the the bank account allows.:rolleyes:

    In the meantime I think I will back up my data files on CD:D

    Thanks for all your suggestions.
     
  8. 2009/06/26
    PeteC

    PeteC SuperGeek Staff

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    Thanks for the update - these things happen :(
     

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