Інсталювати Steam
увійти
|
мова
简体中文 (спрощена китайська)
繁體中文 (традиційна китайська)
日本語 (японська)
한국어 (корейська)
ไทย (тайська)
Български (болгарська)
Čeština (чеська)
Dansk (данська)
Deutsch (німецька)
English (англійська)
Español - España (іспанська — Іспанія)
Español - Latinoamérica (іспанська — Латинська Америка)
Ελληνικά (грецька)
Français (французька)
Italiano (італійська)
Bahasa Indonesia (індонезійська)
Magyar (угорська)
Nederlands (нідерландська)
Norsk (норвезька)
Polski (польська)
Português (португальська — Португалія)
Português - Brasil (португальська — Бразилія)
Română (румунська)
Русский (російська)
Suomi (фінська)
Svenska (шведська)
Türkçe (турецька)
Tiếng Việt (в’єтнамська)
Повідомити про проблему з перекладом
Doesn't look good.
contact hitachi and see if its under warranty and rma it
http://www.hgst.com/portal/site/en/support/warranty/#step_two
If the drive is under warranty, backup any data u wish to save and RMA it back to the manufacture for replacement, as covered by the driver maker's warranty.
Firstly, u need to download and run a proper HDD test from the drive maker.
I actually find your drive data here a little odd, as 1100 power on hours is roughly 45-50 days. So to have it already showing signs of bad sectors is a bit odd, but hey these things do happen. RMA drive is what is suggested here. Data backup should be done for that drive asap so data loss doesn't occur.
How to check/diagnose your Hitachi Internal HDD
http://www.hgst.com/support/downloads#DFT
^Download the Hitachi Fitness tool here. You must run this firstly, so that any error codes produced from it can be taken down by you and then inputted into the RMA form, as it will ask you for which error codes die the test produce for your drive in question.
To check warranty status of your drive, you can do that here.
http://www.hgst.com/portal/site/en/support/warranty/
How bad does it look though?You said it is staring to die but how much time left?50hours or 500 hours?As i said before,i use this drive rarely so if it has another 500hours to live,i will be able to use it for more than a year.If only 50 hours left,i should buy a new one asap,so what do you think?
better backup every important file to another hdd, optical disc (dvd/cd/blu-ray) , external hdd, or usb flash drive.
Did the pc discover more old undiscovered failed sectors or are these failures new and got caused in the last hours?
replace the drive as soon as you can
Some bad sectors have already been replaced with spares, therefore it's suggesting to keep an eye on it. It's a good time for a backup. If your hard drive keeps getting bad sectors, replace it as it will continue to get worst and finally just fail one day.
Run CHKDSK and tick "Check for Bad Sectors", then let it perform on next startup. If it's found some more, your probably running into hardware issue and replacement is the only stable solution.
If CHKDSK is able to successfully mark off those bad sectors, that will help. Then backup that data asap. After u've done that and you have what data u need off of it, u could continue to use that drive, just keep an eye on it. If more bad sectors form, then I'd be prepared to toss it and replace it.
false, the drives space will be reduced for each bad/reallocated sector
^This
And bad sectors aren't marked off until u run something like CHKDSK /F that can possibly mark them off properly. Otherwise the remain open as "dead spots" and it would allow the possibility for data to try and go there, if it does the data becomes corrupted.
"... if a drive knows that a sector is bad and the drive's controller receives a command to write over it, it will not reuse that sector and will instead remap it to one of its spare-sector regions."
While you are correct that it's drive space will be reduced for reallocated sectors (for old drives), you are still actually missing the point that there's a G-list is filling up (newer drives) - you should never actually run into a collection of bad sectors unless the hard drive is physically damaged. Old school drives would just use the next free drive sector, however that's known as 'Sector Slipping', as bad sectors are normally grouped it would have to scan over a bunch and that would slow down the drive over time seeking over bad sectors to the correct ID. Newer drives however don't use ID, but have memory access tables at the front of the drive, which is what that S.M.A.R.T data is reading. It has a reserved number of allocations in which it can quickly look up the locations.
I was merely suggesting you run CHKDSK multiple times, if it marks bad sectors, normally they come with friends. If the bad sectors are building up over time (multiple CHKDSK attempts fix them, but then find more each run), then your Hard Drive is internally damaged beyond repair and replacement is the only option. Once it's run out of those allocation slots you can see under S.M.A.R.T, slow downs and corruption of data can start to occur.
the bad spots are just marked as bad and will not be used