Hard Disk Lba Error
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here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us read error at lba testdisk Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or hd doctor for seagate posting ads with us Super User Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Super User is a question and answer hdd lba site for computer enthusiasts and power users. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up hard drive lba and rise to the top Hard drive LBA Error: How to proceed? up vote 3 down vote favorite 3 I have a hard drive (a samsung product). I couldn't boot into Windows, so I tested the hard drive using Samsung's Utility available at: http://support-us.samsung.com/cyber/popup/iframe/pop_troubleshooting_fr.jsp?idx=51176&modelname=HD250HJ1 On running the scan, I see that the disc has LBA errors. What exactly is an LBA error? any way to salvage the data,
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or the Hard drive? hard-drive share|improve this question edited Sep 22 '15 at 15:10 bertieb 2,53851226 asked Jul 21 '10 at 17:15 Devdatta Tengshe 81081327 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 9 down vote accepted the Hard drive check utility had suggested that I format the Hard drive. Does that mean that I can safely use the disk after a low level format & it won't have any issues? If you provided more information both about the model of drive you are using as well as about the errors the Samsung utility reported you might get better answers. Without knowing the details of your situation all we can really do is speculate. Well, that, and perhaps wave our hands wildly in the air for emphasis. LBA is an acronym for Logical Block Addressing. In this case I assume it is just another, possibly more technically accurate way of referring to a "bad sector". Unless your hard drive is very old, the file system of your OS probably didn't even know anything had happened. For a while now the firmware in hard drives has been transparently handling sector write errors by remapping the sector to another location on the dr
Gaming Smartphones Tablets Windows 8 PSUs Android Your question Get the answer Tom's Hardware>Forum>Storage>Bad Sector on Hard Drive> Solved Bad Sector on Hard Drive Tags: SSHD bad sector Hard Drives damaged blocks Image Storage current pending sector HD Tune Pro HD
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Last response: 30 March 2015 07:14 in Storage Share TheCoolsurdy 27 March 2015 03:19:39 seatools for windows Hello, I installed HD Tune Pro and ran a long Error Scan test. Everything was green except for one rectangle that was red, western digital and it says "Error at 348013 MB (LBA 7127..." If you're wondering why half the Hard Drive wasn't scanned, I scanned the first half, and then the second half. Here's an image of this: I then http://superuser.com/questions/166177/hard-drive-lba-error-how-to-proceed go into the 'Health' tab and see that there is a warning for "C5 Current Pending Sector" and it says: Description: Number of unstable sectors: 1 Status: The drive has unstable sectors. Here is an image of that: I have already backed up all my important data. I have no problems with formatting/deleting all my data. In fact I was actually thinking of reinstalling Windows. Help? More about : bad sector hard drive ronintexas http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2586877/bad-sector-hard-drive.html a c 147 G Storage 27 March 2015 03:22:36 One sector doesn't always indicate the drive is dying - it could be just a bad sector. You should monitor the drive to make sure the amount of sectors aren't increasing. Go ahead and give it a try in reinstalling Windows. m 0 l TheCoolsurdy 27 March 2015 03:39:12 Should I do a quick format or a long format when I reinstall Windows? I want to delete everything and do a fresh installation. I know the only difference is that long format checks sectors. And is there any way to fix a bad sector? m 0 l Related resources accessing a bad sector cause hard drive freeze and shutdown - Forum Found 1 bad sector on Internal hard drive; safe anymore to write data on this disk? - Forum Laptop 320gig hard drive bad sector? - Forum i have a prolem in booting so i used hirens boot cd beagning by testing hard drive i dont found any bad sector then testing me - Forum Bad Sector in Hard Disk Drive. Need Solution - Forum Can't find your answer ? Ask ! Get the answer ronintexas a c 147 G Storage 27 March 2015 03:55:37 You can't "fix" a bad sector - when they are found, they are marked as ba
Display results as threads More... Useful Searches Recent Posts Menu Forums Forums Quick Links Search Forums Recent Posts Menu Log in Sign up AnandTech Forums: Technology, Hardware, Software, and Deals Forums > Hardware https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/lba-error-in-hard-drive.675542/ and Technology > General Hardware > LBA error in hard drive Discussion in 'General Hardware' http://serverfault.com/questions/104417/how-do-i-easily-repair-a-single-unreadable-block-on-a-linux-disk started by tlee, Dec 15, 2001. tlee Member Joined: Jun 7, 2001 Messages: 36 Likes Received: 0 After a fresh install, my hard drive works for about a month or two. It works great in the beginning but it eventually starts to crash more and more frequently. Sometimes when I boot, windows 98 will say that it hard disk has found an error and will fix the problem automatically when I reboot. But eventually I won't even be able to run scandisk. It says that I have a LBA error and can't read from the end of the disk. I then have to reformat and do a fresh install and it happends all over again. I've tried using different hard drives and even gotten replacements b/c they are still under hard disk lba warrenty. But that does not fix the problem. I was told that it could be a memory problem where info was not being read onto my hard drive correctly so I replaced the ram. That did not work. My bios settings are all on auto. I've updated all the drivers. I'm at wits end and the only thing left to do is to test the power supply or get a new motherboard and cpu. What do you guys think? What could be causing this problem? I have a PIII 533, soyo 6vba-133 (with via 4 in 1 drivers), award bios, 30gb WD HD, 256mb crucial CAS3, TNT2 Ultra video card, sound blaster live value, memorex cd-rom, philips cd writer, a removable dock for a storage HD, a generic 56k modem , a 250 watt PS, and a USB PCI card. I hope that is enough info. I'd really appreciate any info. Thanks. T #1 tlee, Dec 15, 2001 tlee Member Joined: Jun 7, 2001 Messages: 36 Likes Received: 0 Does anyone have any idea? #2 tlee, Dec 15, 2001 Colt45 Lifer Joined: Apr 18, 2001 Messages: 19,723 Likes Received: 0 i had this problem too.. its saying either turn LBA on or off. or LBA is set right, and there ac
Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Server Fault Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Server Fault is a question and answer site for system and network administrators. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top How do I easily repair a single unreadable block on a Linux disk? up vote 13 down vote favorite 10 My Linux system has started throwing SMART errors in the syslog. I tracked it down and believe the problem is a single block on the disk. How do I go about easily getting the disk to reallocate that one block? I'd like to know what file got destroyed in the process. (I'm aware that if one block fails on a disk others are likely to follow; I have a good ongoing backup and just want to try to keep this disk working.) Searching the web leads to the Bad block HOWTO, which describes a manual process on an unmounted disk. It seems complicated and error-prone. Is there a tool to automate this process in Linux? My only other option is the manufacturer's diagnostic tool, but I presume that'll clobber the bad block without any reporting on what got destroyed. Worst case, it might be filesystem metadata. The disk in question is the primary system partition. Using ext3fs and LVM. Here's the error log from syslog and the relevant bit from smartctl. smartd[5226]: Device: /dev/hda, 1 Currently unreadable (pending) sectors Error 1 occurred at disk power-on lifetime: 17449 hours (727 days + 1 hours) ... Error: UNC at LBA = 0x00d39ee