Hi, I purchased a PC in June 2015. It is used by my friends as well who doesn't really bothered to shutdown the PC properly. I have Kaspersky Internet Security updated regularly. I have Windows 7 & 8 dual boot with 7 as default.
Recently, my PC was unable to boot. After removing and replacing SATA power & data cables, it was able to boot. It was unable to boot into Windows 7. So, I booted into Windows 8 and ran CHKDSK on few drives.
It gave me a message, "The disk does not have enough space to replace bad clusters....." on two or three drives. I didn't completed the CHKDSK as it was taking long time with the above error message. Upon restart, the PC didn't boot again.
Even though the HDD has lot of free space, it was throwing above error message that it doesn't have free space. After googling, I came to know that the free space of HDD is different from the space that used to replace the bad sectors/clusters (whatever). I have little knowledge about PC hardware but not much about HDD.
I just wanted to know,
1) How much space is allocated for replacing bad sectors and how long it is useful. How to know how much space we have and/or whether we have enough space to replace bad sectors.?
2) What the causes for bad sectors and how to avoid them.? Does improper shutdown and virus creates bad sectors.? My HDD is not even 1 year old. I have few HDDs which are nearly 7 years and they are still working even though not perfectly.
3) I heard about HDD Regenerator to repair bad sectors. What exactly it does.? What are the free alternatives to it.?
4) Does Zero'ing HDD recreate space for replacing bad sectors. Which is the best software for making all zero's. (I heard about KillDisk but never used it.)
5) What is low level formatting and how to do it.?
6) What is the difference of making all zeroes, low level formatting and using HDD Regenator kind of software.
Waiting for clarification from the experts.
Thank you.
Recently, my PC was unable to boot. After removing and replacing SATA power & data cables, it was able to boot. It was unable to boot into Windows 7. So, I booted into Windows 8 and ran CHKDSK on few drives.
It gave me a message, "The disk does not have enough space to replace bad clusters....." on two or three drives. I didn't completed the CHKDSK as it was taking long time with the above error message. Upon restart, the PC didn't boot again.
Even though the HDD has lot of free space, it was throwing above error message that it doesn't have free space. After googling, I came to know that the free space of HDD is different from the space that used to replace the bad sectors/clusters (whatever). I have little knowledge about PC hardware but not much about HDD.
I just wanted to know,
1) How much space is allocated for replacing bad sectors and how long it is useful. How to know how much space we have and/or whether we have enough space to replace bad sectors.?
2) What the causes for bad sectors and how to avoid them.? Does improper shutdown and virus creates bad sectors.? My HDD is not even 1 year old. I have few HDDs which are nearly 7 years and they are still working even though not perfectly.
3) I heard about HDD Regenerator to repair bad sectors. What exactly it does.? What are the free alternatives to it.?
4) Does Zero'ing HDD recreate space for replacing bad sectors. Which is the best software for making all zero's. (I heard about KillDisk but never used it.)
5) What is low level formatting and how to do it.?
6) What is the difference of making all zeroes, low level formatting and using HDD Regenator kind of software.
Waiting for clarification from the experts.
Thank you.