Vista disk corruption issue




















Check If Hard Drive is Corrupted When your hard drive corrupted, there are some symptoms that you can detect. If you have come across the following situations, you need to be cautious: 1. You will hear strange sounds when using your hard drive. Your external hard drive is unreadable. A prompt shows up to ask you to format your hard drive. The property of your hard drive displays 0 bytes. Other symptoms. Part 2. Choose All-Round Recovery mode for thorough recovery progress.

Part 3. It's recommended to use it to fix format disk error without formatting. Open it and right click on the name of the targeted hard drive and choose Properties. Find the Tools section and click on the Check button as shown in the picture. Type wmic and tap on entering to move on. Type disk drive gets status and Enter again. Tap on Start key and navigate to Control Panel from the right column.

Open it and find System and Security and then choose Action Center. Open "File Manager" and choose the name of your hard drive. Right click on it and choose Properties. Click on Repair This Drive upon the finish of error fix on this drive. Part 4. Then you can try to reinstall your hard drive on the original PC. At this time, choose Disk Management. Part 5. Show all storage media: Type diskpart and press Enter, type list disk.

Select the external disk to format: Type select disk X , where X is the disk number. Format the drive: Type clean and press Enter. Create a new partition on the disk: Type create partition primary and press Enter. For Internal Drive 1. Select internal hard drive: type select disk X 2.

Display all partitions: type list partition 3. Select the desired partition: type select partition X 4. Format the partition: type format and press Enter 2 Format Internal Drive through Disk Management There is another simpler way to format the internal hard drive, as shown below.

View solution in original post. If you like, you can use your computer on ATA mode. If the same issue persists, you would need to re-install the Operating system and same driver during the Operating system re-installation as suggested in the previous post.

Most likely it appears to be an issue with the hard drive of your computer. To isolate the issue, I would suggest you to run an Onboard diagnostics on your computer following the steps below:. Note: If you wait too long and the Microsoft Windows appears, then continue to wait until you see the Windows desktop. Now shutdown your computer and try again. Ensure that "Hide drivers that are not compatible with hardware on this computer is ticked" it should be set like this by default.

Select all the drivers listed and then click next. It will take you back to this screen. Restart the system. Once there you can navigate to 'Onboard Devices' and hit Enter. Save the changes and exit. Once the system restarts you should be able to complete the install. After the install and you have loaded the drivers you will need to go back into the bios and change the setting back to AHCI.

Hi Thanks for the fast response. Have already ran the tests and the tests show ALL Pass. Will be trying the BIOS change and will keep you informed. Decided to just go with the clean install as suggested, but also thought why not replace and up grade the drive from GB to GB.

Had most of my important backup files on disk and following your instructions now have a working Dell with a lot better performance. Browse Community. Laptops General - Read Only.

Turn on suggestions. Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type. Showing results for. Since that blog post ran, I've heard from several readers who have attempted to run Check Disk in full repair mode but have discovered that Check Disk fails to run at startup.

I've also heard from several readers who have run Check Disk in full repair mode and have discovered that after doing so, Check Disk runs at every startup. Fortunately, there are ways to work around both of these issues. When Check Disk fails to run at startup, the cause is typically a configuration error or a slight corruption problem in the registry. If that entry isn't configured properly due to some glitch in the system or if it becomes corrupted by a third-party utility, Check Disk will not run at startup.

To fix the problem requires that you modify the registry. Since editing the registry can be a dangerous operation, it is important that you back it up before you begin. Then type regedit. You'll then encounter a UAC and will need to respond appropriately. When the system restarts, Check Disk should run normally. When Check Disk is scheduled to run at startup, Windows is supposed to reset the BootExecute value to its default setting as soon as the Check Disk operation is launched.

If Check Disk runs at every startup, the cause is typically a configuration error or a slight corruption problem in the registry that prevents the BootExecute value from being reset to its default setting.

Therefore, the first solution described above should also solve this problem. However, if resetting the BootExecute value to its default value doesn't solve the problem and Check Disk runs again at startup, it is possible that the Dirty Bit is stuck.

To check the status of the Dirty Bit, you'll use the Fsutil command. When you encounter a UAC, you will need to respond appropriately. Then type:.



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