hdsentinel wrote:Excuse me, I'm not sure if I understand your questions properly.
Do you have the "Reinitialise disk surface" test running?
Correct. Sorry to not make it clear enough. BTW, you were not lying that it tends to be pretty long. It shows me 20 more hours on 500GB hard drive
If so, the weak/pending sectors reported should be corrected. As I wrote, if required, the sector will be re-allocated (so the original sector will not be used again, but then the spare area will be used for all further reads and writes).
But I suspect there will be no need to reallocation this time. It means that the drive checks if the sector can be used without problems, this is why the "Reinitialise disk surface" function is required: it uses special overwrite patterns so the drive can surely check if the sector contents can be read back and the CRC checksum is correct.
If this happens, the sector can be used without problems in the future - so the error will be removed from the text description.
If the drive experiences a BAD sector (this is completely different, as this is the reallocated sector), it is a completely different thing. This is what is never used again. If you see "bad sector" reported by chkdsk, it is also a completely different thing: it is a logical bad sector, related to the current file system only. It means that the "Reinitialise disk surface" test completely fixes that.
Let's see the result of the test. If things will be fine, the surface map after this "Reinitialise disk surface" test will show green blocks only and the errors will be removed from the text description. You may even save the surface map (with the floppy button in the upper right corner) and send it to
info@hdsentinel.com address. Also you may use Report menu -> Send test report to developer option so I can check the results of the test and may advise if the test reveals some further problems.
If you have other question(s) or if I did not understand the questions properly, please let me know.
You may also consider:
- click on the "?" next to the text descriptions
- read the
http://www.hdsentinel.com/faq.php#health section
about "bad sectors".
I will try to be more clear, sorry for the inconvinience. Also don't want to waste your time with any reports, as it's no big deal, really.
As for my questions, they were more of a general questions about the bad sectors/weak sectors/realocated sectors, not questions in regards to the test.
Doing the test as we speak. Got one follow up question if you don't mind. When the drive stumbs upon a bad sector, it is trying(correct? I mean some bits from that sector will be a mess?) to move this data to a portion of spare sectors, and at this time there is 1 more realocated sector.
What I was asking about over here, is the case when the disc finds a bad sector. In that bad sector, there is data written(so some bits). But bad sector means that some(or all?) of that data is corrupted, correct? So what happens at this point, when the disc recognises a bad sector, it tries to move the data stored in that sector to one of the spare ones.
Furthemore, this means, that anytime there is a sector realocated, some portion of that sector(data) is corrupted, and is not the same as original, correct?
Or maybe the hard drive technology is smarter in protecting our data?
What happens here in this case? When there is weak sector, does it mean the situation is simmilar to the bad sector -> realocated sector scenario? Or it just means that the sector is weak but STILL all it's bits are readable as they were originaly written, so it's more of a warning message.
In here, I was asking same (general) stuff, but in regards to weak sectors as oppose to bad sector. Does it also corrupt the data, or the case here is different?
Sorry for not being clear enough before. I hope that will do
cheers
Lucas