G-sense Error Rate Samsung
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keep on crashingEvent Viewer: Drive has a bad blockWhat is going on with this drive? g-sense error rate increasing Forums → Tech / Special Interest → Computer Hardware Help → Why is G-Sense Error Rate not 0 on a brand new hard drive? https://kb.acronis.com/content/9126 uniqs12861 Share « fixing laptop keyboard keys - with air... • Running Hot » knowispower@william.ir knowispower Anon 2012-Apr-1 3:28 am Why is G-Sense Error Rate not 0 on a brand new hard drive?i bought a brand new hard drive recently, and i was disappointed to see that the g-sense http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r27071405-Why-is-G-Sense-Error-Rate-not-0-on-a-brand-new-hard-drive error rate was not 0. some other nonzero values like "raw read error rate" and "seek error rate" seem intimidating, but i read this thread here and it gives me some reassurance that my drive is ok:»forums.seagate.com/t5/Ba ··· p/122382however, that thread makes no mention of g-sense error rate. i have in no way dropped, bumped into, struck, or shocked my hard drive. could something be wrong with this drive, or is g-sense error rate another one of those attributes that are vendor specific? it's a Seagate ST9750420AS 2.5 inch hard drive used as an internal hard drive in my laptop. here's the full S.M.A.R.T. data for anybody who's interested in taking a closer look: ID Description Status Value Worst Threshold Raw Value TEC ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------- 1 Raw Read Error Rate OK 119 100 6 536160 N.A. 3 Spin Up Time OK 100 100 85 0 N.A. 4 Start/Sto
Gaming Smartphones Tablets Windows 8 PSUs Android Your question Get the answer Tom's Hardware>Forum>Storage>Huge G-Sense error rate on Samsung HD203WI !!!> Huge G-Sense error rate on Samsung HD203WI !!! Tags: Hard Drives HD Samsung Storage Last response: 4 October 2010 10:37 http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/262718-32-huge-sense-error-rate-samsung-hd203wi in Storage Share deadman3000 3 October 2010 10:21:20 I have a Samsung HD203WI attached to a Asus P5Q Premium motherboard. I checked the SMART info the other day out of curiosity using HD Tune and it has some CRAZY rising G-Sense error rate in the RAW data column. I confirmed it with CrystalDiskInfo and Speedfan to make sure it was not just HD Tune. The rate is increasing by the second and it in the error rate hundreds of thousands. I would not say the case it is in has tons of vibration. But surely this is not normal? The funny thing is HD Tune has 'ok' next to the column so it's not even marked it up as a problem. Speedfan says on the drives webpage that it is to be watched though. Is the drive getting read to go bye bye or is this just some stupid oversensitive sensor sense error rate or driver issue? EDIT: Added readings More about : huge sense error rate samsung hd203wi fzabkar a c 459 G Storage a b Ô Samsung 3 October 2010 15:38:14 AFAICT your drive is racking up one G-sense error every 6 seconds. The Write Error Rate is also very high. I suspect that the write errors are directly related to the G-sense errors. Hard drives usually have one or two shock sensors on the PCB. These are usually mounted at 45 degrees in order to detect vibrations in both horizontal axes. If the drive detects an excessive shock event during a write operation, then this would result in a write error (or so I would expect). I suggest you remove the drive from your PC and place it on a soft static-free surface. Then run HD Tune's write benchmark, and record the SMART readings before and after. You can see the shock sensors in this article: http://hddscan.com/doc/HDD_from_inside.html m 0 l deadman3000 3 October 2010 20:55:21 I can't perform the write benchmark whilst there is data on the drive. Also I put it on elastic bands outside the case and it still racks up G-Sense errors. Not just every 6 seconds. But 50-200 per second! Everytime I hit refresh the raw data has increased by that amount. Originally I was running the drive vertical