Home & Garden1 min ago
Hard Disk Scan
OK a bit vague I know but when a hard disk scan is done and you get a block/grid of green squares and one square is red (damaged) is that reason to replace a hard drive?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by 237SJ. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well the colours will depend on what scanner you use.
If I started to get bad areas on a hard drive I'd not immediately rush out in panic and buy a new one
: but I would wonder if it is a sign that the thing has started to fail. So I'd have an incentive to ensure I had back up anything I need just in case, and keep an eye on the situation to see if it is an isolated incident or the first of a series of failures.
If I started to get bad areas on a hard drive I'd not immediately rush out in panic and buy a new one
: but I would wonder if it is a sign that the thing has started to fail. So I'd have an incentive to ensure I had back up anything I need just in case, and keep an eye on the situation to see if it is an isolated incident or the first of a series of failures.
I am worried it`s going to fail OG. I knocked the laptop a while ago and it made the most horrendous noise. I could hear it was something that`s rotating so was pretty sure it`s the hard drive. Sometimes it freezes on start up and I get a ticking sound. Having seen a hard drive, the ticking is apparently the little arm being unable to read the drive and going back on itself. The scan has left a desktop icon which shows the red square amongst all the healthy green ones. I know I will have to get a new hard drive but I just wondered how imminent that will be.
Fans also rotate. Just keep an eye on it.
If you are already experiencing problems you suspect may be down to drive issues then it may pay you to run a good scanner overnight that can make multiple passes over each bit, check where data is not being read consistently correctly and recover/move it. I'm unsure if Windows claim to do this automatically these days but I have Spinrite (www.grc.com) which has impressed me over the years. Not cheap though.
If you are already experiencing problems you suspect may be down to drive issues then it may pay you to run a good scanner overnight that can make multiple passes over each bit, check where data is not being read consistently correctly and recover/move it. I'm unsure if Windows claim to do this automatically these days but I have Spinrite (www.grc.com) which has impressed me over the years. Not cheap though.