Well... all the story begins when I buy a new external hdd to store my stuff, along with my current external, which is a 250 GB Western Digital Scorpio Blue in which I enclosed on an Airlink case, and work wonders.
But, I felt like 250 GB were kinda low, basically to store ISOs and some DVD backups (movies I bought a time ago) along with my personal folders and software collections I store. So I decided to buy a used Western Digital Scorpio Blue hard drive, this time a 500 GB drive, that came on a very cheap external enclosure, which I replaced with a Trascend StoreJet Classic 2.5 USB 2.0 case. All of this was less than $40 in total.
Since the beggining, this drive had a warning about relocated bad sectors (Relocated sector count), data I obtained on Everest, so, I decided that maybe a chkdsk full scan could do the trick. Unfortunately, after that, the warning didnt go away, so I tried with HDD regenerator using Prescan, that found 4 bad sectors only... But seems that Everest found more than that, now the warning became a "Inminent failure" warning, and in the data column for the number of bad sector relocation, shows 561, which I assume is a pretty bad number, taking in mind my desktop HDD, my current laptop HDD and my 250 GB external show all 0.
Reading about this on google, I learned that bad sectors are generaly caused by either falls or factory problems, sometimes can be generated if your disk works on low power conditions (?), so in ths last case I can blame that generic case it was enclosed before I purchased the trascend one...-because I felt that it didn't handle power as it should, just because the 250 GB disk works wonders either on my destop and laptop...- I had cases of hdd's falling, but they really never exhibited problems or bad sectors... so I can only assume is more frequent to see factory issues rather than accident related issues, I dont really know.
So, taking in mind this, will it really worth to perform a full scan and repair on HDD Regenerator on this disk, or better assume that it will die eventually and sell solely the disk maybe for spare parts or something? -logical card and other components may be good for that...-.
I ask you because you have the wisdom in this regards, and also, to save my self hours of scanning in a usb interface if this won't fix the problem.
Thanks in advance for your help guys
See ya!!
But, I felt like 250 GB were kinda low, basically to store ISOs and some DVD backups (movies I bought a time ago) along with my personal folders and software collections I store. So I decided to buy a used Western Digital Scorpio Blue hard drive, this time a 500 GB drive, that came on a very cheap external enclosure, which I replaced with a Trascend StoreJet Classic 2.5 USB 2.0 case. All of this was less than $40 in total.
Since the beggining, this drive had a warning about relocated bad sectors (Relocated sector count), data I obtained on Everest, so, I decided that maybe a chkdsk full scan could do the trick. Unfortunately, after that, the warning didnt go away, so I tried with HDD regenerator using Prescan, that found 4 bad sectors only... But seems that Everest found more than that, now the warning became a "Inminent failure" warning, and in the data column for the number of bad sector relocation, shows 561, which I assume is a pretty bad number, taking in mind my desktop HDD, my current laptop HDD and my 250 GB external show all 0.
Reading about this on google, I learned that bad sectors are generaly caused by either falls or factory problems, sometimes can be generated if your disk works on low power conditions (?), so in ths last case I can blame that generic case it was enclosed before I purchased the trascend one...-because I felt that it didn't handle power as it should, just because the 250 GB disk works wonders either on my destop and laptop...- I had cases of hdd's falling, but they really never exhibited problems or bad sectors... so I can only assume is more frequent to see factory issues rather than accident related issues, I dont really know.
So, taking in mind this, will it really worth to perform a full scan and repair on HDD Regenerator on this disk, or better assume that it will die eventually and sell solely the disk maybe for spare parts or something? -logical card and other components may be good for that...-.
I ask you because you have the wisdom in this regards, and also, to save my self hours of scanning in a usb interface if this won't fix the problem.
Thanks in advance for your help guys
See ya!!
My Computer
At a glance
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit B...AMD Athlon 64 X2 5200+ Dual Core CPU @ 2.7 Gh...2x2 GB DDR2 PC-5300 (667 Mhz) Kingston ValueRAMXFX ATI Radeon HD 4350 GPU (512 MB + 512 MB HM)
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Assembled Desktop PC
- OS
- Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit Build 7600
- CPU
- AMD Athlon 64 X2 5200+ Dual Core CPU @ 2.7 Ghz (Brisbane)
- Motherboard
- PCChips A13G+ v3.0
- Memory
- 2x2 GB DDR2 PC-5300 (667 Mhz) Kingston ValueRAM
- Graphics Card(s)
- XFX ATI Radeon HD 4350 GPU (512 MB + 512 MB HM)
- Sound Card
- Realtek High Definition Audio Driver ALC660 @ MCP61S
- Monitor(s) Displays
- HP S2031 20" LED HD Widescreen Display Monitor
- Screen Resolution
- 1600 x 900 px
- Hard Drives
- Maxtor Diamond Max 10 (160 GB, 7200 RPM, SATA-II Hard Disk)
Western Digital Scorpion Blue (250 GB, 5400 RPM, SATA-II External Hard Disk - Personal Data)
Toshiba MQ01ABD050 (500 GB, 5400 RPM, SATA-II External Hard Disk - Software & ISOs)
- PSU
- Pixxo Transformer 850W 80+ Certification PSU
- Case
- Compaq 5BW353 Case
- Cooling
- Many solutions, see other info...
- Keyboard
- Green Leaf (Mitzu) Standard Keyboard
- Mouse
- Microsoft USB Lasser Pointing Device
- Internet Speed
- 10 MB
- Antivirus
- Avast Antivirus Free
- Browser
- Firefox, Chrome, Internet Explorer
- Other Info
- Windows Experience Index Result: 3.8 of 7.9.
Cooling solutions:
- AVC @ 2000/5000 RPM Copper Heatpipes (For Athlon 64 X2 6000+ CPU used in an Athlon 64 X2 5200+)
- Rear Fan 80 mm @ 2700 RPM for heat extraction
- Manhatan Chipset Cooler @ 4700/7200 RPM (For nVidia Chipset in MoBo)
- Foxconn @ 2500 RPM (Old Pentium III heatsink fan) in XFX ATI Radeon HD 4350
