Hddscan For Mac

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We had a call-out about a PC we had installed a couple of years ago reporting it couldn’t find a boot drive. This is usually down to the main hard-drive failing, or perhaps one of the leads not being fitted on to it tightly enough.

HDDScan is a freeware program for low-level HDD diagnostics. HDDScan supports IDE/SATA/SCSI hard disk drives, RAID arrays, external USB/Firewire hard disks, flash cards. Last update 21 Oct. Before I go sleep I started HDDSCAN VERIFY test, and when I woke up, the progress was only 5%. So it's already 15 hours, also look at blocks speed, the fastest are only 50ms. Connected to Renesas Electronics Controller on Asus P8P67 WS Revolution MOBO. HDDScan is by far an exceptional piece of software. The interface takes a little getting used to. One feature that got me excited was the Graph when you're scanning the surface for bad (unreadable) blocks of data.

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Having wired it up again (the client had replaced it with a spare PC) the PC booted up as though nothing was wrong. Not unusual if it was a loose lead so powered it down and took the side of the PC off to take a look.

Unfortunately, the drive wasn’t an old HD or even a new SSD, it was a Toshiba OCZ PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD – one of the new format solid state ‘drives’ that plugs directly onto the motherboard. It was screwed in tight, so no question of it having come loose.

Hddscan For Macbook Air

Looking in Event Manager it was obvious there had been an issue, as it contained hundreds of ‘bad block’ errors for the disk but they stopped being generated on the most recent boot.

Bad blocks were bad news on old mechanical drives and usually were a warning that you’d better check your backups. With SSDs, they are not considered so serious and a lot do contain bad blocks / sectors that the drive simply replaces using the spare memory that comes with the drive. However, we were seeing a lot of errors so the next step was the right-click on the drive in Explorer, Properties / Tools and then clicking the Check button in the Error checking section.

The tool ran quickly and found no bad blocks at all, so did this mean they had all been fixed and the disk was safe to use? For a second opinion we installed HDDScan, which is a great little tool.

After installing it, run it and select the drive you want to scan. We like the Butterfly scan and then as soon as it starts click on the scan in the window at the bottom and choose the Map display. This gives a very nice graphical representation of each block as it is tested by the program.

On our scan, everything was running okay, some sectors were a little slow to respond but not terrible, until it got around 25% of the way through. At the is point it just started displaying the dreaded black square with a ‘B’ in it to show bad block. After this, pretty much every block showed bad until we stopped the scan.

No doubt about it – the drive needed replacing. Luckily we had a Crucial SSD with us so we were able to use the Acronis tool it came with to clone the contents of the OCZ to the SSD, clicking on ‘Ignore All’ when it hit the bad blocks.

The PC is running fine now but i9t’s a worry that a 3-year old OCZ could have failed so badly in that time.

Take-home message though is that if you want to see if your drive is healthy, HDDScan is a handy piece of software to have available.

PatHddscan For Mac2020-08-05T18:06:07+01:00July 29th, 2020|Software we like|

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Hddscan For Mac

HDDScan is a freeware utility for hard drive diagnostics (RAID arrays, Flash USB and SSD drives are also supported). The program can test storage device for errors (Bad-blocks and bad sectors), show S.M.A.R.T. attributes and change some HDD parameters such as AAM, APM, etc. HDDScan can be useful for performing the regular 'fitness test' for your drive and predicting its degradation, so you will be able to prevent data loss and backup your files before you will have to contact the data recovery service. Additionally, software can be used as the hard disk temperature monitor and reading/writing benchmark – performance graph is displayed for every test. Supported storage devices: - IDE (ATA) and SATA HDD. - SCSI (SAS) HDD. - External USB drives and all major USB boxes (see Appendix A). - FireWire or IEEE 1394 HDD (see Appendix A). - RAID volumes made of ATA (IDE) / SATA / SCSI HDDs (surface tests only). - USB Flash (pen drives) – surface tests only. - SATA / ATA SSD – solid state drives. Storage device tests: - Verification in linear mode – helps to determine if your drive needs data rescue, has recoverable errors or in its perfect shape. - Reading in linear mode – simpler, but faster disk check. - Erasing in linear mode. - Reading in Butterfly mode (synthetic random read). S.M.A.R.T.: - Reading and analyzing SMART parameters from ATA/SATA/USB/FireWire HDD. - Reading and analyzing Log Pages from SCSI HDD. - SMART tests running on ATA/SATA/USB/FireWire HDD. - Temperature monitor for ATA/SATA/USB/FireWire/SCSI HDD. Additional features: - Reading and analyzing identity information from ATA/SATA/USB/FireWire/SCSI HDD. - Changing AAM, APM, PM parameters on ATA/SATA/USB/FireWire HDD. - Reporting defect information on SCSI HDD. - Spindle start/stop function on ATA/SATA/USB/FireWire/SCSI HDD. - Reports can be saved in MHT format. - Reports can be printed. - Skins support. - Command line support. - SSD SMART and Identity reports.