I guess honesty is the best policy and maybe I should tell this client I will have a second look at no charge,,,it was working otherwise i wouldnt have delivered it back of course...You also will always find clients trying to get something for free which is the other danger of this buisness so you never know wheter its really your work at fault or not, Another reccomendation I have is put a small sticker on all parts you replace...If it comes back and you see the parts you put in are removed and not yours you know its been tampered with. You really need to cover your ass in this buisness dont you.
I guess honesty is the best policy and maybe I should tell this client I will have a second look at no charge,,,it was working otherwise i wouldnt have delivered it back of course...You also will always find clients trying to get something for free which is the other danger of this buisness so you never know wheter its really your work at fault or not, Another reccomendation I have is put a small sticker on all parts you replace...If it comes back and you see the parts you put in are removed and not yours you know its been tampered with. You really need to cover your ass in this buisness dont you.
I have read numerous forums and threads about Toshibas and there poor crafsmanship or cheapness of parts whatever you want to boil it down to...To me a laptop is a laptop I dont care about brand but I have seen Toshiba as being notorious for problems and breakdowns,
so I thought it could be a faulty Ram stick,,,Put them in another laptop and worked fine
I have contacted the client and have said we will take it back and try resolve the issues and give it back to him in working order again at no charge except for parts if needed,
My hunch would be replacing the Hard Disk, But Disk Info did report it as Good with no bad or over written sectors, is there another tool for diagnosing hard drives? Of course I was just putting the components into another system to test them individually to try find the problem through process of elimination, Lesson Learned
Do you mean via the 'Disk Management' option of the 'Computer Management' MMC snap-in? You do realise this is not a diagnostic, but just a basic file-system check? It does not measure the health status of the physical drive structure.I used disk info to check that disk and it said it was healthy, not even a caution...was healthy and blue
It's a lot easier if you learn to diagnose correctly in the first instance, that's why it's good get experience with someone else before learning the hard way and at your own cost.Its a hard buisness but its best to reimburse a customer and keep them than have bad rep and loose more...
Manufacturer's diagnostics are always the best way to go, especially if you need to RMA the drive. I use Hitachi/IBM Drive Fitness Test as a quick & generic test and it also quickly identifies the OEM of the drive without me having to open up the case so I can following on with the correct manufacturer software if need be.What in your oppinion is the best way to diagnose a hard drive
Absolutely not IMHO, file system errors can be repaired with chkdsk, but physical errors cannot - however physical error may manifest as file system errors and chkdsk will re-allocate the data on bad sectors to those which are currently mapped as good in the drive allocation table - thus chkdsk will only provide a temporary fix if the physical structure of the drive is failing. You will see adverts for software which claim they can rejuvenate a hard disk with reported physical errors, but I would never, ever rely upon them. The relative cost of a new hard disk against the consequential losses and costs of storing irreplaceable and often valuable data on a graded drive make absolutely no sense, especially if you're serious about this type of work as a business.if a drive is consdidered unhealthy or faulty is there a way it can be repaired via software?
Are you sure?Toshiba have no support software for diagnosis unlike western digital or Seagate which is one of the reasons I dont like Toshiba