6.5 - 6.8 MB/sec is extremely slow. This may only happen if you connect a hard disk with USB 2.0 connection which limits the maximum transfer speed to approx. 30-35 MByte/sec (total). Considering that the Reinitialize Disk Surface is very intensive and process every sectors 5 times, yes, this gives exactly the speed you wrote (6.8 x 5 = 34).
But then the other tool also can't perform much faster when the disk used with same connection, configuration. Sorry, this is simply not possible as the bandwidth is limited by the connection and/or a possible used USB dock/enclosure/adapter (or something else in the system).
As I tried to explain, the Reinitialize Disk Surface is much more intensive (and this is why it may be more effective than any other "zero fill", "regeneration", "low level format", "revitalize" functions).
You wrote that you used a simple WRITE test of the other tool, so if you want to compare performance, you'd need to compare the SAME functions, then please use Disk menu -> Surface test -> WRITE test.
Here is a screenshot: it clearly shows that the write test on a typical 500 GB WD hard disk starts from 100 MByte/sec in Hard Disk Sentinel:
And a Reinitialize Disk Surface on the same hard disk, same connection starts from 27 MByte/sec:
So as you can see, this is exactly what I wrote: the test performs with highest possible speed. For these tests, I used USB 3.0 connection, same should happen when the drive would be connected to internal SATA connector.
Connecting this drive with USB 2.0 adapter/enclosure would drop performance lots, then I'd get the values you wrote.
But it is not really problem, limitation of Hard Disk Sentinel ....
If the performance on your system is different, I'd recommend to use Report menu -> Send test report to developer option.
Then I can examine the actual situation, verify connection, possible USB adapter/bridge (if used) and/or driver version and can examine the situation better. Also then I could reproduce and investigate.
> Even if I take into account those overwrite cycles etc., as you mention in your post, the actual
> speed of 6.5-6.8MBs didn't even come near to the 20-25MBs you mention.
Yes, it's true if the performance is limited by USB 2.0 connection (or something else, for example the total bandwidth of your controller if you perform multiple tests at the same time).
> Please don't get me wrong, I do not tell that your App has a problem, it's bad or whatsoever,
Thanks
> it simply looks a bit curious as I compare several apps and some of the others are (a lot) faster.
This is really weird for me as personally, regardless of connection, disk types, models, firmware, drivers, disk / RAID controller or so, I never experienced similar: in same configuration, Hard Disk Sentinel was always faster than other tools (if other tools could at least recognise and fully utilise the disk drive).
Not sure which Hard Disk Sentinel version you used, but I suspect it is not a very-very old version...
Since the first versions, the tests improved lots (and new testing functions / options added) but this should not affect the results in this case (may affect performance testing of some special SAS drives but this is other question).
> Low-Level Formatting will run on that same HDD with a speed of above 100MBs.
Sorry, but I can confirm that Low-level formatting is NOT POSSIBLE on any modern hard disk.
If any tool shows they perform LLF - they all wrong.
They may perform a zero-fill (write zeroes to all sectors) - which is 100% same as Disk menu -> Surface test -> Write test in Hard Disk Sentinel with its default settings.
The "Low level format" function (which re-sets sector markers) are not possible on IDE/SATA/USB hard disks released these days (or in the last many years).
Some special SAS hard disks may offer that function to change the size of non-standard sectors (for example to make 520 / 528 bytes/sector) but not for SATA hard disks. Just for some info: such non-standard hard disks could be read/written/tested/diagnosed/repaired/reinitialized by Hard Disk Sentinel (while no other software can do similar).
And this kind of zero-fill (or we can call write testing) is done by Hard Disk Sentinel too, with numerous options/functions (overwrite passes, partial overwrite, special fill patterns and so) - of course with highest possible speed.
> I simply try to find out if there is any real benefit in using HD Sentinel, and till now I didn't find some.
Thanks for your honest words.
There are really LOTS of benefits: if you check the Store page, it shows the most important functions/features:
https://www.hdsentinel.com/store.php
Generally disk testing and this function is only one of the many of Hard Disk Sentinel.
Disk monitoring with "standard" environment (IDE/SATA/USB hard disks) and special situations like internal/external RAIDs, external disks, SCSI/SAS drives, industrial memory cards, NAS devices - are just the ones I'd mention first. Hard Disk Sentinel has highest compatibility and status-detection functionality for all kind of devices, including hard disks, SSDs, hybrid drives, 4K drives, RAID controllers, external single and multi-drive enclosures - most (or all) of them are not supported by any other tools.
The main purpose of Hard Disk Sentinel to detect and reveal possible issues real-time, alert and notify about any problems, degradations which may lead to failure or "just" data corruption / data loss.
Intensive disk testing with highly configurable options - plus the ability to perform same or different tests at the same time on multiple drives also make it unique. Plus Hard Disk Sentinel can show the actual files/folders damaged and allows immediate repair of them during the tests. Plus it monitors and detects changes, degradations and issues with the disk drive.
Monitoring performance is critical, this is what Hard Disk Sentinel also does. Setting ms values is nice, but alone it is not really enough or correct unless we can monitor the real status, possible changes and other factors.
And we did not mention the extra features like reporting, exporting status information, automatic backup, remote monitoring etc... all included in Hard Disk Sentinel (only).
If you do not use any of these functions and you simply want a tool ONLY to overwrite your hard disks (or if preferred, we can call "low level format" even if it is not correct) then yes, you may not require Hard Disk Sentinel at all. Hard Disk Sentinel can do this - but if you do not see the benefits of monitoring, alerting and problem-reporting (plus the other testing, backup and additional options) then yes, Hard Disk Sentinel may not be required.
> Let me something explain: I live in Thailand and doing repairs for several Orphanages and
> institutes for Disabled Youngsters for free because there isn't any Budget for such repairs and/or exchanges.
I can completely understand the situation.
This is (even if my company is not a big one) exactly from time-to-time with our partners, we offer complete, fully functional Hard Disk Sentinel versions FOR FREE. Such promotions are not rare, will be possible in the near future.
So I *never* asked to spend money if you do not require (or do not see) the benefits, functions, features, compatibility of Hard Disk Sentinel.