nauip Posted May 4, 2022 Share Posted May 4, 2022 Lucky me! I only have 4 of these. One of them is very unhappy. I am also very unhappy because I cannot figure out which one is the culprit. I will likely have to pull them one at a time a boot up each time until my system is less cranky. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 marquis6461 Posted July 15, 2022 Share Posted July 15, 2022 No Problem. If you start the Scanner an look down the status column. The scanner will have identified the drive as Damaged. My suggestion is to use Spinrite from GRC.com to read the damaged areas for any data you want to keep and either lock out that damaged area or try to fix it. Spinrite is from Steve Gibson and has worked on a lot of hard drives I have. Usually this type of error is the result of the manufacturer and not due to mishandling of the drive. I can tell you for sure you would have had a larger number on a dropped drive. if you come to the end of your rope. Here is a last ditch effort I use on shaky drives. 1. Fill the drive with info from a spare drive of the same size. 2. Move the info from the affected drive back to your spare drive. When you get the error that the file can't be moved them rename the file Damaged01.dat and make it hidden Your drive will still have some use in it but then I suggest you turn off the notifications for that drive. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Question
nauip
Lucky me! I only have 4 of these. One of them is very unhappy. I am also very unhappy because I cannot figure out which one is the culprit. I will likely have to pull them one at a time a boot up each time until my system is less cranky.
Link to comment
Share on other sites
1 answer to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.