Hard Drive Write Error Rate
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Fix Read Error Rate
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What Is Raw Read Error Rate
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Read Error Rate 200
Drives Storage Last response: 23 June 2011 05:42 in Storage Share drevin hdd read error rate 11 June 2011 14:20:18 Hi, I noticed one day that one of my HDDs had a write error rate seek error rate (some tools call it multi zone error rate) of 3. Up until that day it had always showed 0. All the other S.M.A.R.T values were (and still are) flawless. After a https://kb.acronis.com/content/9136 couple of days, the write error rate changed back to 0. I then remembered that about a week earlier, a power outage had caused the PC to shut down while it was transferring raw DV video footage from my camcorder to that same HDD. Do you think this could have caused the temporary rise in the error rate, or is the drive http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/270091-32-power-outages-write-error-rate starting to lose its health? I know an error rate of 3 isn't really significant, I'm just interested. More about : power outages hdd write error rate almartin a b G Storage 12 June 2011 00:59:09 Run CHKDSK on that disk to fix any errors it may have. You may be correct about the power shut down causing a temporary rise in error rate. drevin 23 June 2011 05:42:29 I can pretty much confirm that the power outage did indeed cause the temporary increase in write error rate. There was another power failure and AGAIN it happened while the PC was writing a video file. This time I was playing a game and recording with FRAPS (about 40 MB/s). Some time later the write error rate was at 22, only to return to 0 again the next day. Can't find your answer ? Ask ! Publish Related resources SolvedS.M.A.R.T - Read Error Rate and Write Error Rate, is bad?! Forum SolvedPlease Help! Error code 0xc000014c. Cant Chkdsk because hdd is write protected. Forum SolvedG sense error rate bad but good write error rate Forum cloning
All Hardware Benchmarks CPU Benchmarks Video Card Benchmarks Hard Drive Benchmarks RAM Benchmarks PC Systems Benchmarks Android Benchmarks iOS / iPhone Benchmarks Services Store Support Forums About http://www.passmark.com/forum/general/1460-newer-hdd-write-error-count-failure Us Company Contact Us The Press Room Login or Sign Up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T. Log in with Search in titles only Search in General only Advanced Search Search Forums New Topics Today's Posts Mark Channels Read Home Forum General If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may error rate have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. Announcement Collapse No announcement yet. Newer HDD, write error count failure Collapse X Collapse Posts Latest Activity Search Page of 1 Filter Time All Time Today Last Week read error rate Last Month Show All Discussions only Photos only Videos only Links only Polls only Filtered by: Clear All new posts Previous Next robtheslob Newbie Join Date: Feb 2008 Posts: 1 #1 Newer HDD, write error count failure 02-07-2008, 12:11 AM I purchased a WD 750GB HDD 35 days ago and tested it thoroughly before trusting it. I completely filled the drive with data, erased it then ran burnintest for 6 days straight at a speed of 3MB/s. All this time diskcheckup was running and no change in the smart values. Yesterday the write error & reallocated sector counts started going up. This morning my PSU died and I replaced it with a lower wattage one I had lying around. Today those values have grown exponentially. So do I need to go though the long process of a factory RMA immediately or has a failing psu and possible underpowered psu caused a minor damage with a high error rate? DiskCheckup Version: DiskCheckup V2.1 Build: 1001 SmartDisk DLL Version: SmartDisk DLL SDK v1.0
(Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology; often written as SMART) is a monitoring system included in computer hard disk drives (HDDs) and solid-state drives (SSDs)[1] that detects and reports on various indicators of drive reliability, with the intent of enabling the anticipation of hardware failures. When S.M.A.R.T. data indicates a possible imminent drive failure, software running on the host system may notify the user so stored data can be copied to another storage device, preventing data loss, and the failing drive can be replaced. Contents 1 Background 2 History and predecessors 3 Provided information 4 Standards and implementation 4.1 Lack of common interpretation 4.2 Visibility to host systems 5 Access 6 ATA S.M.A.R.T. attributes 6.1 Known ATA S.M.A.R.T. attributes 6.2 Threshold Exceeds Condition 7 Self-tests 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links Background[edit] Hard disk failures fall into one of two basic classes: Predictable failures, resulting from slow processes such as mechanical wear and gradual degradation of storage surfaces. Monitoring can determine when such failures are becoming more likely. Unpredictable failures, happening without warning and ranging from electronic components becoming defective to a sudden mechanical failure (which may be related to improper handling). Mechanical failures account for about 60% of all drive failures.[2] While the eventual failure may be catastrophic, most mechanical failures result from gradual wear and there are usually certain indications that failure is imminent. These may include increased heat output, increased noise level, problems with reading and writing of data, or an increase in the number of damaged disk sectors. A field study at Google [3] covering over 100,000 consumer-grade drives from December 2005 to August 2006 found correlations between certain SMART information and actual failure rates. In the 60 days following the first uncorrectable error on a drive (SMART attribute 0xC6 or 198) detected as a result of an offline scan, the drive was, on average, 39 times more likely to fail than a similar drive for wh