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When do you know that your hard drive is failing

Posted by JKON
JKON
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on Sunday, 18 December 2011 in Data Recovery

Determining the failure of your hard drive is not always straightforward. Some types of failures are obvious to detect and others not. Some very common signs that your hard drive is failing are:

Loud Noises: If your drive makes unusual noises such as clicking, grinding, scraping or emitting a very high-pitched whine, then this is a clear indication that your drive is either soon failing or has already failed.

Not recognised: If your hard drive is not recognised at all in BIOS during boot time, while it used to in the past, that is also and indication of some sort of hard drive failure.

Smart Indication: If your hard drive supports the Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology (SMART), then any indication of a SMART error while booting your computer is a clear sign that your hard drive is failing.

SMART_hard_drive_failure

Errors: If your drive is returning read errors or “sector not found” errors, then it is more than likely that your hard drive has a problem.

 

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The printed circuit board of a hard drive controls and coordinates the communication between the computer and the hard drive in order to read and write data. So, when the PCB  gets damaged (due to mostly surges or power spikes) you lose access to your data. More often than not other hard drive components are affected as well such as the  read-write heads and pre-amplified circuit.

The printed circuit board of a hard drive controls and coordinates the communication between the computer and the hard drive in order to read and write data. So, when the PCB  gets damaged (due to mostly surges or power spikes) you lose access to your data. More often than not other hard drive components are affected as well such as the  read-write heads and pre-amplified circuit.

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