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Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
That's weird, because no hard drive works like that at all.
(quoting from a reviewer site)
Actually the entire laptop seems to be upgraded, originally it had:
AMD Ryzen 5 PRO 2500U
8 GB DDR-2400 Single-Channel. (The laptop has two RAM slots, but only one is occuppied)
Toshiba XG5 KXG50ZNV256G, 256 GB SSD, (182 GB free for the end user)
Microsoft Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
This makes the entire thing very difficult.
How is it possible, it is locking its drive to only 140GB?
and a repairguy cannot get more out of it? ----
Assuming of course, it is not a fake / false drive size.
At the very least it seems to me that the laptop is consuming more power by default than it was designed to consume. With its original hardware and a brand new battery, that battery would only last for 5 hours. I assume it is a lot less with the upgrades in there.
If it is software, then it has to be something installed on the OS that locks the drive to 140GB. The question is of course what it is, and what triggers the drive locking to 140.
Did you try things you can find on youtube, like for example:
- check if the HDD has a password in the Bios (and remove this)
So basically on the second time that happend
When i go to check the D drive (hdd partition) the windows readed that it exists, but any information about size/files inside or accessing it was impossible, even when trying cmd dskchk (i guess that was the name) it didn't respond with any details about D:, just a message about it unable to access the drive
Also the repair man used a tissue to hold the hdd in place (the hdd place was to large for a hard disk)
Wipe the drive clean, use deep clean (BIOS-level formatting) and recover the space was my thought at first but as I read on, things got weirder and wierder, the HDD is too small was one thing that threw me for a loop; although, it is a laptop and some of them are pretty wild if its an off-brand.
is it asking for a password even though you did not set one?
did you recently do a firmware update for it?
2. a frimware update for what? The HDD, if so I'm not really expert at hardware/software i didn't know hdds has frimwares
some drives have their own programs that help run them
they come preinstalled with encryption and all that
there are posts of people getting locked out of wd's when they update them
and about the drives setting passwords
if it never asked for one, then it is probably not one
you can try making a bootable linux thumb drive
see if it can see the disk
https://support-en.wd.com/app/answers/detailweb/a_id/50390/~/wd-security-password-protection-for-wd-drives-guided-assist
There are a couple of things that could be going on.
There is a tool called Disk Management. This is used to format or partition disk drives. You can see the actual physical drive there, not just the partitions with a file system.
Within this tool, it is possible to unmount (offline) and remount (online) a device to windows. This might fix the issue. You can also try "redetect". If this fixes the issue, then it is some kind of bug.
If it does not however.... then it could be a cable or power issue.
It can basically be compared to hooking your phone to the laptop. You can set it in Charge Only mode, which causes the phone to be displayed in My Computer, but you cannot access it; much like you said with your HDD.
I am guessing the data connection for some reason breaks, but the odd thing is that it doesn't break immediately, only circumstantially and after replacing (and likely reseating) the drive it works again.
It happens during higher voltage use of your system. I have to consider that it might be your motherboard or, rather a specific part on it, rather than software.
Considering the laptop uses a specific part to connect the HDD to the motherboard, its possible its just this part that is faulty. It might be caused by small leak basically, voltage loss; it for some reason triggered some kind of security in the HDD, which then resets when the laptop's power is completely lost (due to the battery being disconnected) within the Repairman's shop.
It could also be an overvoltage issue; which I hope not.
It's hard to say to be honest.