944,198 Members | Top Members by Rank

Ad:
May 7th, 2005
0

How do you completely wipe Hard drive (NOT using "format c:" or "fdisk"?

Expand Post »
How do you completely wipe Hard drive (NOT using "format c:" or "fdisk"?

My old Sony Vaio Pcg f350 randomly crashes and is genrally crash prone. I have checked the hard drive and it contains "bad clusters"! I have used "format c:" and "fdisk" but neither get rid of the bad clusters when reinstalling 98se! Please help me find a way to wipe the hard drive completly.

Thank You. Craig
Similar Threads
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
Newbie Poster
bagpipes1000 is offline Offline
1 posts
since May 2005
May 7th, 2005
0

Re: How do you completely wipe Hard drive (NOT using "format c:" or "fdisk"?

http://www.kostis.net/freeware/killmbre.htm


Also check the HD's manufacturer site for diagnostic or erase tools.





Michael
Reputation Points: 11
Solved Threads: 8
Posting Whiz in Training
pcschrottie is offline Offline
204 posts
since Dec 2004
May 7th, 2005
0

Re: How do you completely wipe Hard drive (NOT using "format c:" or "fdisk"?

Im pritty dang certain you can't get RID of bad clusters(since there just that clusters that have gone bad, physicly bad)

You can mask bad clusters on your HDD, Your manafacturer may have tools for that.

or if you wish to fork out some dosh Spinrite from www.grc.com is spost to work well

I was also under the impresson that file systems avoided using them by masking them as bad (FAT apparently does (oviously not that well))
Reputation Points: 21
Solved Threads: 10
Junior Poster
Paul.Esson is offline Offline
181 posts
since Feb 2005
May 10th, 2005
0

Re: How do you completely wipe Hard drive (NOT using "format c:" or "fdisk"?

DM has a function names Zero Fill, you can try it~
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 1
Newbie Poster
wuxiwilliam is offline Offline
1 posts
since May 2005
May 10th, 2005
0

Re: How do you completely wipe Hard drive (NOT using "format c:" or "fdisk"?

Bad clusters are hardware errors, there's no cure.
Sometimes a lowlevel format can fix them but that requires special equipment with modern harddisks and is best left to the manufacturer.
Team Colleague
Reputation Points: 1658
Solved Threads: 331
duckman
jwenting is offline Offline
7,719 posts
since Nov 2004

This thread is solved

Either the thread starter or a moderator has marked this thread as solved. You can most likely trust the responses and answers given. There is most likely no reason for any further responses to be posted here. If you have a related question, please start a new thread in this forum instead.

This thread is more than three months old

No one has posted to this discussion for at least three months. Please let old threads die and do not reply to them unless you feel you have something new and valuable to contribute that absolutely must be added to make the discussion complete. Otherwise, please start a new thread in this forum instead.
Message:
Previous Thread in Windows NT / 2000 / XP Forum Timeline: modem trouble on Laptop
Next Thread in Windows NT / 2000 / XP Forum Timeline: svchost.exe is beating me up





About Us | Contact Us | Advertise | Acceptable Use Policy
Forum Index | Build Custom RSS Feed


Follow us on Twitter


© 2011 DaniWeb® LLC