Recently Windows hung up (the cursor moved, but the tasks did not respond), when restarting, I saw how chkdisk started. Then the next time you restart, it automatically entered into system restore. Now the Windows is loaded, but about 10 minutes, a slave appears. table, but impossible to work.

In the end, I decided to check hard. I found the Lenovo diagnostic item in the boot menu of the laptop. There launched recover bad sector tool. As a result, I have the following: a test runs for 1.5 hours, out of 1.5 billion sectors about 10 million have been checked, At the same time, there are already more than 1000 errors in the sectors. (It’s a very embarrassing runtime, at such a speed it will be enough for a week and the fact that errors go in fragments. Not a single sector, but 10, 20, 50, 100 pieces in a row)

Actually the question is: should I trust the standard prog and diagnose the death of the disk, or should I try to make a bootable USB flash drive with some kind of prog and drive this disk from under DOS? Or maybe try something else?

In the service, of course, they will immediately say, they say, pay, buy a new disk, We will do everything ourselves and put it on our own. But I want to make sure before you spend money.

Note Lenovo v580 drive Hitachi Hts541075a9e680 750Gb.

UPDATE: I tried MHDD, I supplemented the question with SMART and the usual scan results by 23% approximately (I think there is already enough to make a diagnosis). Does it make sense to restore this HDD at all: Try to do erase or remap ... or can immediately go to the trash ?

First test by native means:

screenshot

Screen SMART from MHDD:

SMART

The results of a simple scan by 23%:

results

Ps There are a couple of screenshots on the cloud. Did not insert here, so as not to pile up the topic. link to cloud

  • IBM has sold its business to Hitachi hard drives. It was after this that Hitachi discs "fell down" just in the jambs. This is a history lesson. (I once had an IBM hard drive for half a gigabyte) - 0andriy
  • @ 0andriy, do not believe it, according to our internal statistics Hitachi - the most enduring screws at the moment. But the blue wd do not like. - don Rumata

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Judging by the screenshot - you all will answer "buy a new screw." Except me. I will answer: save your important files to another screw \ flash drive \ cloud and or buy a new screw. This can still be mastered by MHDD for DOS setting the screw controller mode in IDE . If the bios of course can. A live terabyte screw is checked for a 3 hour curvature. Plus or minus 5 minutes. Five hundred hours, respectively, for an hour and a half.

It would also be nice if you add a question to SMART exhaust Particularly interested in the item "Rellocated sector count".

  • I watched smart 3-6 months ago, it was all perky (some desktop auslogics program). The condition of the disk was noted as good. I'll try MHDD, If there you can look at the smart, then I will update the question with a smart screen. Ps The test has been spinning so far, I have cut down 50 million sectors, the test counted about 5000 errors. By the time of about 6 hours. Progress 3%. - Bogdan
  • @Bogdan, mhdd is valuable in that it checks the physical sectors whether they are alive or not, and how much response time each of them has. There are smartphones too, but this is not a killer feature of the program. - don Rumata
  • updated the question, added a few screenshots. Judging by the screenshots, is it worth treating the disc? Data saved, if that. - Bogdan
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    @Bogdan, even with one UNC, it should already be translated into the category of "well, we throw off the films that are on the Internet and if the screw dies, we will be fucked." And you - 2k such. Just throw it out or use it as a stand for a hot griddle with kartoha. For academic interest, you can run a scan with "Remap: ON" mode. But only for academic. NOT production - don Rumata