DBAN - 80 Hours for a 250 Gb Drive in AutoNuke Mode

allanc

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Location
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
I am trying to run DBAN on a 250 Gb SATA drive in AutoNuke mode.
The estimated time to completion is 80 hours.
The computer is a Dell Dimension 8400.

Previously, on another IDE computer with another drive of similar capacity it completed in about 4 hours

Are there some settings in the configuration of the program or BIOS that require changing?

Thank you in advance.
 
Not sure what configuration autonuke uses. Set it to use a one pass wipe of just 0's and skip verification. I nuked an 80GB drive in <2 hours recently, so I'm not sure why yours would take so much longer.
 
I guess if the disk has any problems then the app could get stuck like any other. I understand it flips to PIO mode when it runs into certain problems too.

Also which wiping algorithm you choose makes a big difference.

Unless you have a particular reason, there is little or no technical advantage in using anything other than a simple zero write pass.

I stopped using DBAN a while ago when I discovered that most drives have FastErase function built in which can be used by software like MHDD or Secure Erase: http://cmrr.ucsd.edu/people/Hughes/SecureErase.shtml

It's often a lot faster than any other wiping application and doesn't suffer from bad sectors as badly in my experience.
 
Not sure what configuration autonuke uses. Set it to use a one pass wipe of just 0's and skip verification. I nuked an 80GB drive in <2 hours recently, so I'm not sure why yours would take so much longer.
I am now trying one pass, zeroes, no verify on a 250 Gb SATA drive and the estimated run time is 17 hours and increasing.
 
I guess if the disk has any problems then the app could get stuck like any other. I understand it flips to PIO mode when it runs into certain problems too.

Also which wiping algorithm you choose makes a big difference.

Unless you have a particular reason, there is little or no technical advantage in using anything other than a simple zero write pass.

I stopped using DBAN a while ago when I discovered that most drives have FastErase function built in which can be used by software like MHDD or Secure Erase: http://cmrr.ucsd.edu/people/Hughes/SecureErase.shtml

It's often a lot faster than any other wiping application and doesn't suffer from bad sectors as badly in my experience.
Well, my clients want that warm feeling that the data is destroyed.
 
I stopped using DBAN a while ago when I discovered that most drives have FastErase function built in which can be used by software like MHDD or Secure Erase: http://cmrr.ucsd.edu/people/Hughes/SecureErase.shtml

There's an interesting paper at the Secure Erase site. With increasing data density and hybrid heat-magnetic drives, bulk magnetic erasing and even even effective physical destruction is becoming harder to accomplish.
 
In that case I would use HDDErase (you can find it on UBCD). It invokes an ATA command written into the firmware of the drive and wipes it 'using hardware'
 
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