Read Error Encountered At Sector 0 On The Disk
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& Giveaway Tim Brookes Top Deals Search Open Menu Close Menu PC & Mobile Windows Mac OS X Linux Android iPhone and iPad Internet Security Technology News Lifestyle Entertainment Office Productivity Creative Gaming Browsers Social Media Finance Self Improvement Hardware Technology Explained Buying Guides Smart Home DIY Product Reviews Deals Giveaways Top Lists About About MakeUseOf Advertise Privacy Chats Facebook Facebook Facebook Facebook Search disk read error windows 10 for: Is there a bad sector in my hard disc and what can I do? Partha Sarathy March 11, 2013 Facebook Twitter Pinterest Stumbleupon Whatsapp Email I use Acronis True Image for the backup of my dual-boot system of Windows 7 and XP. Yesterday while doing a periodical backup on Windows 7 I get the following: failed to read snapshot ox10C45A,CRC ERROR OX100155 failed to read from sector 82419748 of harddisk 1 I ran chkdsk and it returned no errors. What is this error? Any help will be very much appreciated. Ads by Google 11 answers Comments are Closed EL March 18, 2013 at 6:22 am Did you try chkdsk? Alan Wade March 11, 2013 at 6:27 pm Here is an article which should help you out a lot. http://www.groovypost.com/howto/check-health-of-computer-hard-drive/ Alan Wade March 11, 2013 at 12:12 pm Seatools is another app to test your drive(s). It comes in two flavours DOS and Windows, I would recommend you try the Windows version as the other is a little complicated. http://www.seagate.com/support/downloads/seatools/ Alan Wade March 11, 2013 at 12:15 pm There is a list of seven free hard drive testing programs t
Home Forums Blogs Search HelpWelcome Message FAQs Search Tips Participation Guidelines Terms and Conditions All Community All Community Forums Ideas Blogs Advanced Log in Sign up English简体中文 Français Deutsch 日本語 Português Español Home ForumsBlogs Ideas Norton ProductsCommunity Malware Discussion Norton Mobile Products Norton a disk read error occurred windows 10 Public Beta Off-Topic Discussion Other Norton ProductsAnnouncements Norton Security Backup Norton Internet Security | Norton a disk read error occurred press ctrl+alt+del to restart windows 7 360 | Norton AntiVirus Norton Toolbar / Norton Identity Safe Norton Ghost Norton for Mac Norton Family PCTools Forum Feedback Product Suggestions a disk read error occurred laptop Not what you are looking for? Ask the experts! JustMyAlias Newbie1 Reg: 09-Dec-2011 Posts: 1 Solutions: 0 Kudos: 0 Kudos0 Disk Read Error - Bad Sectors - Can I Ghost? Posted: 09-Dec-2011 | 11:03AM • 1 http://www.makeuseof.com/answers/is-there-a-bad-sector-in-my-hard-disc-and-what-can-i-do/ Reply • Permalink I have a Dell Studio laptop running WIndows XP (home). I have encountered a Disk Read Error (Press Ctrl+Alt+Del to reboot) - with no hard drive noises. I have run the internal Dell diagnostic tool and the SeaTools (yes, it is a SeaGate hard drive). The SeaTools SATA tests failed, and I ran the SeaTools 'repair' sectors options, and got a 'Pass After Repair'. I am still unable to boot https://community.norton.com/en/forums/disk-read-error-bad-sectors-can-i-ghost - I can only get to the SetUp through F12. I was wondering if Norton Ghost would be helpful in me trying to recover my files from the hard drive. How does it run? Do I hook up an external hard drive to the bad computer, to ghost the data to?...Does Ghost run from a bootable disk (since I cannot boot up?)?? I don't want to buy the software only to realize it won't be useable or helpful. TIA!! Me Too0 Last Comment Replies redk9258 Norton Fighter25 Reg: 22-Feb-2010 Posts: 2,796 Solutions: 119 Kudos: 368 Kudos0 Re: Disk Read Error - Bad Sectors - Can I Ghost? Posted: 09-Dec-2011 | 11:49AM • Permalink Ghost will backup your hard drive. Since you have disk errors, Ghost will not help you to get Windows to boot. If you have files on that drive, it would be a good idea to use Ghost to make an image of the drive. This can be done offline using Cold Backup. You would want to use either a second internal or external USB / eSATA drive for this. If the drive is failing, I would do this sooner instead of later. It's too bad you didn't make a Ghost image before the drive started to fail. Then you could have recovered to a new
panel Disk read option - real-time settings adjustment The runtime control panel can be used to adjust disk I/O settings "on the fly". This is useful when processing a drive with bad sectors. All the changes made to the configuration are in effect for http://www.z-a-recovery.com/manual/runtime-control.aspx the next I/O operation (i.e. "immediately" for most conditions). Recommended settings For a good disk (no bad sectors) "Timeout" - set to 1000 ms. "Retry attempts" - set to "No retries". "Avoid repeated retries" - enable. "Skip factor" - set to 1. For a disk with bad sectors "Timeout" - set to 200 ms unless doing RAID recovery. For a RAID recovery, set to 500. "Retry attempts" - set to 1 unless the analysis is unacceptably slow. To increase read error speed, set to 0. "Avoid repeated retries" - enable. "Skip factor" - set to 32, unless the analysis is unacceptably slow. To increase speed, gradually increase "Skip factor" until satisfactory speed is achieved. "Force bus reset" should be disabled in most applications, even on a disk with bad sectors. Timeout Controls the amount of time to wait before deciding that a sector is bad. Sometimes a disk device driver does not provide a proper response about read operation disk read error status, so any read operation that takes longer than the specified amount of time is considered failed. Note that running some I/O-consuming tasks in the background may result in requests to good sectors exceeding this limit, causing some erroneous markings. The default setting of 1000 ms should fit for most cases when there is no physical damage on the disk. If the disk is physically damaged and scanning it takes a very long time, try decreasing this parameter down to 100 or 200 ms - this should give a significant speed boost. Retry attempts This setting controls amount of the additional read attempts once a bad sector is encountered. If set to "No retries", only one attempt will be made (i.e. the first one fails and then no retries). If "Avoid repeated retries" is set, the additional reads will only be attempted during a first encounter with the particular bad spot. During subsequent encounters, if any, the read error status will be indicated without ever attempting to read the sector. Avoid repeated retries If enabled, bad sectors are remembered and subsequent attempts to access the sector already listed as bad return failure without actually accessing the disk. This provides speed improvement on physically bad drives. Skip factor Controls how many sectors are skipped (i.e. presumed bad without actually attempting disk access) after one bad sector is encountered while reading the disk. The default