New
#1
The value of true "Low-Level" formatting of HDD?
I'm about to rebuild a drive and the nature of its downfall is really disconcerting, and I have questions about wiping & reformatting.
The drive is a highly rated [by real people] Hitachi 100GB 7200rpm notebook drive.
I formatted it previously just letting windows do its thing [not quick format, just regular]. It ran fine for the user for about 3 months, then I get a call that it won't boot. Sure enough, windows was damaged to the point it wouldn't boot. I tried to reconstruct the clumsy way so as not to lose any important files but I don't like the result so I am about to totally nuke it and start from scratch.
Good smart people seem to disagree over formatting options:
1. "Low Level" formatting seems like a good idea, except that all drives are not the same so nobody seems happy with "one utility for all drives". But not all makers have, clearly, a "low level format" utility for each discrete class/type drive they ship.
So ???
2. If not low-level, is it wise to just let Windows 7 installer format the drive? Is there a better way to do it? Is the format utility housed under "Disk Management" identical to the one on the Win7 install DVD? If not, why not?
3. Is there, actually, some far/clearly superior 3rd party utility that is shown to render a superior drive format for installing the OS?
4. On a conventional SATA drive like this, is alignment necessary, and if so, done after the OS is config'd? or prior to?
ok... somebody educate me.