Bad sectors not being corrected
Posted: 2013.05.27. 23:49
Hello,
Recently I received a couple used hard drives, and HD Sentinel has been wonderful in helping test and revive them. I am having a issue with a particular hard drive that I received though.The drive in question is a 1 TB hitatchi drive that was made in 2009. When I received the drive there were already about 100 bad sectors, but no other problems with SMART.
I was able to discover and fix a few additional bad sectors (thanks!), but am having trouble with a specific one. The issue is that HD Sentinel keeps discovering the same bad sector over and over, but hasn't marked it bad and reallocated it yet despite the numerous surface tests I have done on it including multiple write and reinitialization tests.
Looking at the log it is the same two sectors towards the end of the drive
5/26/2013 7:37:57 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865802000
5/26/2013 7:38:32 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865802000
5/26/2013 7:39:08 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865802000
5/26/2013 7:40:08 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865804000
5/26/2013 7:41:02 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865804000
5/26/2013 7:42:03 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865804000
I even ran a test using another program on a linux live CD and it gave errors on the same sector.
Other than this sector the drive now seems fine, a short self test passes fine, while an extended self test ends ups failing near the end. And I have been able to copy a lot of data to it and use it fine.
My questions:
1) Any reason why HD sentinel hasn't reallocated these sectors yet? Is it possible to manually reallocate these sectors using HD Sentinel or any other program?
2) Knowing that a specific sector is a problem: is it possible to partition around it? Do any programs allow you to assign a partition to certain sectors?
3) I have also run a check disk test or two on the drive, would this help Windows discover the bad sectors and not use them?
Any way I go forward with this drive I am not going to be using it for mission critical data and I will understand if I loose some, would just like to avoid loose as much as possible.
And as for replacement it seems to be out of warranty and hasn't met the threshold.
Thanks for all your hard work!
Recently I received a couple used hard drives, and HD Sentinel has been wonderful in helping test and revive them. I am having a issue with a particular hard drive that I received though.The drive in question is a 1 TB hitatchi drive that was made in 2009. When I received the drive there were already about 100 bad sectors, but no other problems with SMART.
I was able to discover and fix a few additional bad sectors (thanks!), but am having trouble with a specific one. The issue is that HD Sentinel keeps discovering the same bad sector over and over, but hasn't marked it bad and reallocated it yet despite the numerous surface tests I have done on it including multiple write and reinitialization tests.
Looking at the log it is the same two sectors towards the end of the drive
5/26/2013 7:37:57 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865802000
5/26/2013 7:38:32 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865802000
5/26/2013 7:39:08 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865802000
5/26/2013 7:40:08 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865804000
5/26/2013 7:41:02 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865804000
5/26/2013 7:42:03 AM ! Error: 121 The semaphore timeout period has expired., Sector: 1865804000
I even ran a test using another program on a linux live CD and it gave errors on the same sector.
Other than this sector the drive now seems fine, a short self test passes fine, while an extended self test ends ups failing near the end. And I have been able to copy a lot of data to it and use it fine.
My questions:
1) Any reason why HD sentinel hasn't reallocated these sectors yet? Is it possible to manually reallocate these sectors using HD Sentinel or any other program?
2) Knowing that a specific sector is a problem: is it possible to partition around it? Do any programs allow you to assign a partition to certain sectors?
3) I have also run a check disk test or two on the drive, would this help Windows discover the bad sectors and not use them?
Any way I go forward with this drive I am not going to be using it for mission critical data and I will understand if I loose some, would just like to avoid loose as much as possible.
And as for replacement it seems to be out of warranty and hasn't met the threshold.
Thanks for all your hard work!