Solved Seagate external 1TB randomly stops working until reboot

soliunasm

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I'm having a bit of trouble regarding my external hard drive, not sure if it's failing or not. I've had it about 4 years now, use it every day, and as of a couple months back it's started acting up on me. I always have it connected to the USB 3.0 slots on the back of my tower(It's 3.0 compatible), and I switch which port it's in on occasion along with taking it to other places. The drive itself is a Seagate Backup Plus 1TB drive for Windows, and I completely formatted it a month ago to see if it would fix my problems. It didn't.

Alright, onto the problem. At random points in time the drive just stops. For example, I could be watching a video file I stuck on it and it just freezes on a frame and that's it, MPC-HD just straight up crashes. Or I could be transferring something over and it just dies mid-transfer with the transfer window going on for an infinite amount of time and I have to forcibly close things down. This is where the real problems start.

1. The hard drive is acted on as if it's still in use by the computer. It shows up in My Computer, it shows how much space is left, I can go through all the hard drive and all its folders, and any files loaded by a program prior to the stopping of the hard drive will still work up until where the hard drive just stopped.
For example, let's say I'm watching video1 and I switch to video2. Half way through video2 the hard drive just stops. If I double-click video1 it will play exactly how it did prior to the crash, but video2 will either not load at all or only go up to the point where the hard drive stopped.

2. Any files on the hard drive are still there, but once it has stopped the only files that show up are the ones in the current folder, the root of the hard drive, whatever folders lead you to your current in-use folder, and then just folders that link to other folders. Nothing else will load.

3. I cannot safely remove the hard drive, it's just not possible. If I log off then log back on, it gives me a bunch of write errors and still won't let me touch the hard drive.

4. If I manually just pull the thing out of the tower, the computer still thinks it exists. It still shows up under My Computer, it still shows the files that it has cached I believe, I can still run video1 for example, and still go into any of the other folders.

The only way I've been able to fix it so far is by restarting the computer which brings everything back just fine, but it takes like ten minutes every time it does this. It's not a frequent thing, maybe once every week or so, but it's still enough to annoy me. I've run chkdsk on it along with its repair function but it turns up nothing, I haven't tried Seagate's own tool but I plan on doing that, and Googling a bit has brought up some things saying to try putting it in a USB 2.0 slot. I just want to know if this is going to die soon or not. This is my fifth Seagate to give me problems in oh so many years, so if I do end up having to get another hard drive, would anyone have a recommendation?
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
AMD Phenom II X2 555
Motherboard
ASUSTeK Computer INC. M4A87TD/USB3
Memory
8.00 GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 668MHz
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon Sapphire 5770
Screen Resolution
1920x1080 & 1600x1200
Hard Drives
977GB SAMSUNG SAMSUNG HD103SJ ATA Device
977GB Western Digital WDC WD1002FAEX-00Y9A0 ATA Device
I'm having a bit of trouble regarding my external hard drive, not sure if it's failing or not. I've had it about 4 years now, use it every day, and as of a couple months back it's started acting up on me. I always have it connected to the USB 3.0 slots on the back of my tower(It's 3.0 compatible), and I switch which port it's in on occasion along with taking it to other places. The drive itself is a Seagate Backup Plus 1TB drive for Windows, and I completely formatted it a month ago to see if it would fix my problems. It didn't.

Alright, onto the problem. At random points in time the drive just stops. For example, I could be watching a video file I stuck on it and it just freezes on a frame and that's it, MPC-HD just straight up crashes. Or I could be transferring something over and it just dies mid-transfer with the transfer window going on for an infinite amount of time and I have to forcibly close things down. This is where the real problems start.

1. The hard drive is acted on as if it's still in use by the computer. It shows up in My Computer, it shows how much space is left, I can go through all the hard drive and all its folders, and any files loaded by a program prior to the stopping of the hard drive will still work up until where the hard drive just stopped.
For example, let's say I'm watching video1 and I switch to video2. Half way through video2 the hard drive just stops. If I double-click video1 it will play exactly how it did prior to the crash, but video2 will either not load at all or only go up to the point where the hard drive stopped.

2. Any files on the hard drive are still there, but once it has stopped the only files that show up are the ones in the current folder, the root of the hard drive, whatever folders lead you to your current in-use folder, and then just folders that link to other folders. Nothing else will load.

3. I cannot safely remove the hard drive, it's just not possible. If I log off then log back on, it gives me a bunch of write errors and still won't let me touch the hard drive.

4. If I manually just pull the thing out of the tower, the computer still thinks it exists. It still shows up under My Computer, it still shows the files that it has cached I believe, I can still run video1 for example, and still go into any of the other folders.

The only way I've been able to fix it so far is by restarting the computer which brings everything back just fine, but it takes like ten minutes every time it does this. It's not a frequent thing, maybe once every week or so, but it's still enough to annoy me. I've run chkdsk on it along with its repair function but it turns up nothing, I haven't tried Seagate's own tool but I plan on doing that, and Googling a bit has brought up some things saying to try putting it in a USB 2.0 slot. I just want to know if this is going to die soon or not. This is my fifth Seagate to give me problems in oh so many years, so if I do end up having to get another hard drive, would anyone have a recommendation?
Sounds like the arm is starting to wear down, the arm is the part that reads the platter and is only rated for a certain number of movements in it's lifetime, I think it maybe time for a replacement.

Here's a video explaining how hard drives work and you can see the parts I mentioned in the video
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
CPU
Intel Q6600 @ 2.6Ghz
Motherboard
Evga NF78-CK-132-A 3-Way SLI
Memory
4Gb DDR2 Corsair Dominator @ 800Mhz 5-5-5-15
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 560 GTX SC FTW 1GB
Sound Card
Realtek HD 7.1 Audio, Plantronics GameCom780 7.1 Headset
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell S2409W
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
SanDisk SDSSDHII-120G-G25 120GB SSD
Samsung 7200RPM 750Gb SATA
Samsung 850 EVO 120GB SSD
Western Digital Green 1TB 7200RPM
PSU
Xigmatek 750W Quad sli quad core 80% eff
Case
Antec 900 Gaming Case
Cooling
Zalman CNPS9700-NT NVIDIA Tritium
Keyboard
Logitech generic keyboard, MS wireless keyboard
Mouse
Razor Lachesis Banshee V2 Blue, 4000DPI, MS wireless mouse
Internet Speed
152Mb Virgin Media Fibre Optic
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Google Chrome
Other Info
Wireless Gaming Receiver for Windows, Wireless Xbox 360 Pad
Ya i would begin backing up what you can ASAP before it fails and becomes totally useless.
Also consider replacing with a SSD. They are more expensive, but since its less mechanics involved in the functionality of the drive your less likely to run into problems later on.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
CPU
Intel I5 4670k 3.4gig Quad Core
Motherboard
MSI Z87 G55
Memory
G.Skill Sniper 8gig (2x4gig) DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 7850
Sound Card
AMD High Definition Audio Device
Screen Resolution
1900x1080
Hard Drives
WD 1T
PSU
600w Corsair
Case
NZXT 220 Mid Tower
Cooling
Stock
Internet Speed
50g
Antivirus
Avast (free edition)
Browser
Google Chrome
I have been using Seagate drives for years and found them to be (historically) very reliable Then suddenly, a few weeks back, they started dying on me! I had a 2TB Barracuda drive that had presented no problems, fail and crash suddenly.

No attempts at data rescue were successful. I ended up sending it to a local data recovery shop, and they indicated that only hardware rebuilding would make the drive workable again.

So, try to get data off the drive as soon as you can; otherwise, you'll lose everything on it -- like I did!
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Win7 Pro 32-bit, Win8 Pro 32-bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II X6 1090T
Motherboard
Gigabyte
Memory
4GB ddr3 1300
Graphics Card(s)
AMD HD 4290 onboard
Sound Card
Builtin Realtek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 24" widescreen, LG 23" widescreen
Screen Resolution
1920x1200/1920x1080
Hard Drives
Kingston 256GB SSD
Keyboard
Logitech Illuminated Keyboard
Mouse
Logitech M705 wireless mouse
Antivirus
Norton Av 2013
Browser
IE v10
Thanks everyone for the responses. I noticed that when I moved it from my USB 3.0 slot to a 2.0 it seemed to stop the random crashing, but to be on the safe side I might pick up another hard drive soon.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
AMD Phenom II X2 555
Motherboard
ASUSTeK Computer INC. M4A87TD/USB3
Memory
8.00 GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 668MHz
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon Sapphire 5770
Screen Resolution
1920x1080 & 1600x1200
Hard Drives
977GB SAMSUNG SAMSUNG HD103SJ ATA Device
977GB Western Digital WDC WD1002FAEX-00Y9A0 ATA Device
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