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So last week I had CHKDSK complaining about my secondary HDD, but it failed during every attempt to check the drive. I ran SpinRite, which appeared to be unsuccessful (only made it about 4% through and then claimed to need several hundred more hours to finish and had unrecoverable data). However, after rebooting after SpinRite, CHKDSK was able to finish and since then everything seems to be in perfect running order. Running SpinRite now gives the HDD a clean bill of health.

Now, I'm nervous about the future of the drive. It's mostly for storage, nothing too important. I'm going to make a backup DVD for some of the rare music and whatnot, but I'm still worried that it may go wonky again. I can afford a new drive, but money is a little tight. I have a lot of experience with computers, but I've never had a drive seem to be finished but then make a seemingly full recovery. I don't know what to expect.

Anyone have input?

2007-06-04 12:20:50 · 5 answers · asked by HaphazardJoy 4 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

It's a 200gb drive split into two partitions (my important stuff is replicated across my main 80gb drive and both partitions). What's confusing me is that this drive wasn't acting funny before this little incident, and it's not acting funny now. I could go pick up a new drive now if I felt doom was imminent, but I don't want to just ditch this drive either. I will get a new drive eventually, probably a nice 300+gb external drive for my music/movies.

2007-06-04 13:02:51 · update #1

5 answers

I always tell everyone..."The question isn't WILL my hard drive go bad???? It's WHEN will my hard drive go bad???"
They go bad or obsolete. There tends to never be a hard drive that you could never fill....At least for us computer geeks that are always into something new that uses a lot of space...
Start saving up for another one soon so you can be prepared...Always partition and save important stuff on big partition and window OS and programs on smaller. This way
when problems occur you just format windows and not the important stuff...backup, backup, backup, backup always

2007-06-04 12:32:14 · answer #1 · answered by Tony 3 · 0 0

Hi. I would not count on luck for important data or files. SpinRite uses a technique that copies data and re-writes it. Some times this will fix a failing section of the drive, but re-read the part about luck.

2007-06-04 12:27:17 · answer #2 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

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2016-11-25 23:01:02 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Future? that drive has NO future. Time for a new one.

2007-06-04 12:23:47 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

back up all of your data you want to keep... and STOP using until you accomplish that... if it starts acting strange, thats a good bet something could be wrong

2007-06-04 12:24:29 · answer #5 · answered by EVOX 5 · 1 0

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