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Thread ID: 123091 2012-02-02 20:44:00 HDD - Anything better than CHKDSK for WinXP? Strommer (42) Press F1
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1257109 2012-02-02 20:44:00 For checking and repairing hard drive errors, is there anything better than CHKDSK for Win XP?

I believe Seagate has its own downloadable disk tools, but what about other hard drives?

Thanks
Strommer (42)
1257110 2012-02-02 21:24:00 spinrite.
www.grc.com

it's not cheep but it is very good.

chkdsk, is more about checking the file system structure.
spinrite, is about check the disk surface.



.
robsonde (120)
1257111 2012-02-02 22:39:00 Repairing errors ?? what sort of errors?? what sort of repairs ??
Any HD with bad sectors shouldnt be trusted .

The old Dos format had a switch to re-check bad sectors.
Some of the manufacturers tools are generic & can be used on most drives .

chkdsk /r will do a full surface scan. That usually good enough .
1101 (13337)
1257112 2012-02-02 23:37:00 http://www.hdat2.com/

Free, and works great. Make sure to run executable v4.5.3 as the newer one doesn't actually do anything (yet)
Agent_24 (57)
1257113 2012-02-03 01:10:00 Seatools works on all HDD's for testing not sure about repair. Alex B (15479)
1257114 2012-02-03 02:34:00 There is no HDD repair by software, unless it's a software issue. (Like the recent Seagate firmware problem)

Bad sectors can be reallocated but whatever caused them in the first place is likely going to keep causing them.

Only filesystems can be repaired by software, but this assumes you're not working on a faulty disk. If you are, copy what you can with Gnu DD Rescue etc and then perform repair\recovery of the filesystem.
Agent_24 (57)
1257115 2012-02-05 19:45:00 :thanks

Thanks everyone for the info.

I have three PC's that I am upgrading/cleaning, adding new hd's to two of them.
Sometimes I keep an old hd (in the case if there is room, unconnected) as a 'last ditch' means of backup, so doing a 'repair' (reallocate bad sectors) would seem to be reasonable.
Strommer (42)
1257116 2012-02-05 20:04:00 In very rare cases a drive can have a faulty sector or two and still be ok, the manufacturers tools will "fix" that. Most of the time though a faulty sector is the beginning of the end and time to throw the drive away.
As one example I had a software error on a machine left downloading overnight which meant it continuously tried to write the same bit of data for several hours, and fried that one sector. A zero fill low level format with seatools reallocated the sector and the drive lasted several more years without further problems. Hard drives have a small reserve of hidden capacity for this purpose.

Mainly what I'm getting at is it's worth a try to maybe save a drive that you'd otherwise throw out anyway, just don't use it for critical data.
dugimodo (138)
1257117 2012-02-05 21:45:00 HD Sentinel - not free but trial works fine. Free bootable CD version also available.

http://www.hdsentinel.com/
www.hdsentinel.com

Acronis Drive Monitor
www.acronis.com
Renegade (16270)
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