PCX
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 134
The first several responses should have been
"What tests have you run on the hard drive and what were the errors?"
Also, what other tests have you run? Memory, HDD, Motherboard, etc. Before troubleshooting any software issues, you should run a full diagnostics, other wise you will just end up troubleshooting software issues caused by failing hardware; in short, you will just waste a lot of time. As someone has already mentioned, bad sectors is bad. Typically anything under 10 should be fine, but if you start getting around 20, you need replace it. Also, if you are getting 20+ bad sectors, typically this is when you start seeing read errors . . . those are bad.
Another thing to note is that you never want to test a hard drive within the OS on that drive. You want to run those tests on a completely different computer. I am not sure how accurate crystaldisk is, (I hear good things about it), but you should run the hard drive test with another utility just in case.
"What tests have you run on the hard drive and what were the errors?"
Also, what other tests have you run? Memory, HDD, Motherboard, etc. Before troubleshooting any software issues, you should run a full diagnostics, other wise you will just end up troubleshooting software issues caused by failing hardware; in short, you will just waste a lot of time. As someone has already mentioned, bad sectors is bad. Typically anything under 10 should be fine, but if you start getting around 20, you need replace it. Also, if you are getting 20+ bad sectors, typically this is when you start seeing read errors . . . those are bad.
Another thing to note is that you never want to test a hard drive within the OS on that drive. You want to run those tests on a completely different computer. I am not sure how accurate crystaldisk is, (I hear good things about it), but you should run the hard drive test with another utility just in case.