Final answer?

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Daniel Murphy

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i fallow the thread however i don't see the resolved question, could you please explain the solution here? i would truly appreciate it.



if this is too much work, would you better define where i may see the solved problem?







Cha wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

29-Sep-08



Problem resolved. See this thread:



http://www.microsoft.com/communitie...eral&mid=222c8b9c-2701-4cda-b2fc-82e8eda2cc42



The short answer is that CHKDSK completed when I ran it from a recovery CD

instead of from the hard drive.



Where to get a recovery CD if it didn't come with your computer (Lenovo

doesn't supply them)?



See the following:



http://www.downloadsquad.com/2008/0...ion-cd-you-can-still-download-a-vista-recover



http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/windows-vista-recovery-disc-download/



http://www.istartedsomething.com/20070929/vista-sp1-recovery-disc/



Chad



Previous Posts In This Thread:



On Tuesday, September 02, 2008 5:56 AM

Fran wrote:



System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

Hello, I have tried to run "Error Checking" on my Windows Vista Laptop (used

to be called "Scan Disk" in the older Windows versions). For whatever reason,

the system freezes up on Stage 5 of 5 when the checking is 71% complete. I

tried doing this several times and it always stops at the 71% point. I have

to manually turn off the computer. Can anyone suggest what might be wrong

here and how I go about fixing it? Thanks in advnace.



On Tuesday, September 02, 2008 6:45 AM

Rick Rogers wrote:



Hi Frank,Why were you running it?Did disk activity actually stop?

Hi Frank,



Why were you running it?

Did disk activity actually stop?



Sometimes it appears to hang at a certain percentage but it's actually still

working. Keep in mind tha the percent figure is just an estimate of

progress, not a hard and fast figure.



--

Best of Luck,



Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP

http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/

Windows help - www.rickrogers.org

My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com



"Frank" wrote in message

news:9E1A5932-CB50-46AE-827C-A89D11BCDBF6@microsoft.com...



On Tuesday, September 02, 2008 11:54 AM

Fran wrote:



Hello Rick - to answer some of your questions..

Hello Rick - to answer some of your questions..



(1) I run disk error checks all the time on my computers because I thought

this was part of the standard maintenance steps that users should perform. I

try to keep my computers running error free.



(2) It appeared to me that disk activity actually stopped at 71% on Stage 5

of 5. The reason I say that is that to the right of the percentage you can

actially see the number of files being checked and it was not moving. I let

the system sit idle like that for almost 2 hours and still nothing moved, so

I manually shut it down.



So where do I go from here? Do you think something is wrong because it did

not complete Stge 5. The laptop is only 4 weeks old!



"Rick Rogers" wrote:



On Tuesday, September 02, 2008 9:20 PM

Rick Rogers wrote:



Hi,I wouldn't run error checking as part of normal maintenance, but there's no

Hi,



I wouldn't run error checking as part of normal maintenance, but there's no

saying you can't. I suspect it's hanging on a file, but as to whether or not

there is actual damage you should run a drive diagnostic tool. These are

commonly available for free from the system or drive manufacturer and run

from bootable media.



--

Best of Luck,



Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP

http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/

Windows help - www.rickrogers.org

My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com



"Frank" wrote in message

news:20D1273D-9C95-43A9-8E1C-8B26DC9BCB51@microsoft.com...



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 11:33 AM

Cha wrote:



I am having a very similar issue to Frank's.

I am having a very similar issue to Frank's. I've used PCs forever and

consider myself good at this stuff, but I'm stumped.



After using a new T61 laptop with no issues for a couple of weeks, I started

getting intermittent lock-ups. Wondering if it was related to the disk, I ran

the complete disk check (with surface scan). It always freezes about 80% of

the way through the free space scan. It's always on a slightly different

cluster number, but very close. Like Frank, I leave it for hours to verify

that progress really has stopped. At that point it only responds to turning

off the power.



Other things I've done:

- Run all the PC Doctor tests (a bunch of hardware tests that came

preinstalled) - passed both when running from boot and running under Vista

- Run a memory tester from Microsoft all night long - no lock up

- Installed utilities to monitor CPU and other temperaturs - no heat problems

- Run a drive fitness testing utility from the drive's manufacturer

(Hitachi) - no errors



I'm just about out of ideas. It will freeze at 80% of the way through that

disk check every time, and I'm wondering if that is related to the lock-ups

I've been getting.



I can't afford freezes up in the middle taking notes in a lecture (the

machine's main use), but it did happen at least once a day for several days

last week.



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 12:30 PM

Ringmaster wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

On Sat, 27 Sep 2008 08:33:20 -0700, Chad

wrote:





Well, if you consider yourself "good" at this stuff, stop being in

denial. If you run a full surface scan repeatedly and it freezes

around the same spot over and over that should be telling you several

clusters are messed up or at least the File System thinks they are.

Did you run with automatically fix errors turned on?



Surprise, Windows under NTFS is actually pretty good at repairing

common file system errors, but you do need to tell it to fix them

during the scan, otherwise it just reports it found errors. If it can

it uses the brute force method and just marks "bad" sectors and

doesn't use them after moving what it can out of them. You'll see a

summary at the end of any scan disk operation. You should always run

with auto fix turned on.



If you truly have "bad" sectors, ie, something physically wrong with

the disk platters themselves, not just the file system it should again

mark them then skip over them.



One way to know a hard drive is "dying" is it gets an increasing

number of hard errors. This may or may not be accompanied by your

drive starting to make sounds it didn't before. Could be a radical

change or something very subtle like a change in pitch or how loud

your drive is. You can try to "fix" a hard drive or confirm it is

going bad by using a utility from your particular drive maker, like

Seagate. Aside from that things like Spinrite may fix it, but you're

probably better off just recovering what you can from the drive and

replacing it. All hard drives fail sooner or later, often with

absolutely no warning at all which is why backup is so important.



A truly "dead" drive is one that no longer spins up or lost the

ability to accurately control the read/write heads. There's really

nothing practical you can do if something on the circuit board gave up

the ghost or one of the mechanical parts like the motor gave out. More

often the read/write heads drift out of alignment with the main

symptom the drive talking longer and longer to access files or not

being able to at all. That's where something like Spinrite might help.



If your laptop is new, take advantage of your warranty.



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 12:48 PM

Cha wrote:



Thanks for your thoughts.

Thanks for your thoughts.



Yes, I'm running it with automatically fix errors turned on.



I fully expect chkdsk to identify bad sectors and mark them as unusable,

then move on. What's got me stumped it that it's NOT doing that. The system

just freezes at about the same point during the free space part of the scan

(step 5 of 5). That really doesn't tell me what's going on.



If that tells me, as you say, that "several clusters are messed up or at

least the File System thinks they are," how would I fix that? Chkdsk won't

more beyond that point!



As for taking advantage of the warranty, (a) I like to have some idea what

the problem is before I compain, and, related, (b) I can't really afford to

be without the machine for a long time, so if I can prove that is it the

drive (as opposed to the controller on the motherboard overheating or

something like that), then maybe I can convince a repair place to just swap

the drive instead of leaving or sending the whole machine someone for days or

weeks.



So, can you or anyone else out there elaborate on what the system looking up

during stage 5 might mean?



Since this is the free space scan part of the check, what has the file

system got to do with anything?



On, one more question: Does dskchk attempt to write to every sector, or just

read from each one? I'm trying to figure out why it passed the surface scan

in the BIOS, the surface scan in PC Doctor, and the surface scan in the

Hitachi drive diagnostic utility, but it dies during the Dskchk? Does this

point to a file system thing then? And if so, how to fix it?



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 2:49 PM

Cha wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

Huh?



Invalid parameter - /p



"the wharf rat" wrote:



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 3:42 PM

Ringmaster wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

On Sat, 27 Sep 2008 11:49:00 -0700, Chad

wrote:





The P switch is not needed. All you need is the R switch. Regardless

it assumes you're running from the command prompt, which isn't

necessary.



You haven't said WHY you're doing a surface scan. In 99 out of 100

times it isn't necessary and just slows things way down.



Have you just run with auto repair set to see if it gets through?

That's all I ever do and it works the vast majority of the times. It

never takes more than a few minutes and often will find and repair

file system errors.



If you're running Vista, and you're doing the C drive and Vista is

installed on this drive, it will be locked and you can't do it. Vista

will tell you that, ask if you want to schedule it. Are you doing it

this way? If not, do it this way. It is what Microsoft's software

engineers designed into the system. It is one of the few things in

Windows that DOES work the majority of times.



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 4:02 PM

Cha wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

Q1: Why am I doing a surface scan -- As mentioned in my first post above,

because I was trying to track down possible reasons for my system locking up,

and just trying every diagnostic test I could think of. Now that I see it

won't complete that scan, I am concerned.



Q2: Have I run it with only the auto repair option and not the surface scan,

and does that succeed? -- Yes, and yes. But that's not satisfying my concern

re. why the system locks up during the surface scan.



Q3: Am I running it from the Vista GUI, on the system drive, and scheduling

it to take place upon reboot? -- Yes.



So, no, it doesn't seem to work for me. And I'm apparently not the only one

with this problem, based on the first post in this thread, and also on this

thread:



http://www.microsoft.com/communitie...eral&mid=a612cb91-9074-4d78-9142-6cdd5011be24



Any other thoughts on this? Why would the hardware tests from the drive

manufacturer and others pass, but the computer freeze during the Windows disk

check?



Thanks in advance for any additional insight,

Chad







"Ringmaster" wrote:



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 11:19 PM

wra wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

chkdsk /r /p



On Saturday, September 27, 2008 11:19 PM

wra wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

Yeah, I know :-) I always err on the side of completeness :-)





Discs do occasionaly develop bad blocks...



On Monday, September 29, 2008 8:51 AM

Cha wrote:



Re: System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking

Problem resolved. See this thread:



http://www.microsoft.com/communitie...eral&mid=222c8b9c-2701-4cda-b2fc-82e8eda2cc42



The short answer is that CHKDSK completed when I ran it from a recovery CD

instead of from the hard drive.



Where to get a recovery CD if it didn't come with your computer (Lenovo

doesn't supply them)?



See the following:



http://www.downloadsquad.com/2008/0...ion-cd-you-can-still-download-a-vista-recover



http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/windows-vista-recovery-disc-download/



http://www.istartedsomething.com/20070929/vista-sp1-recovery-disc/



Chad





Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice

BizTalk: Parallel Processing with Correlation

http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorial...alk-parallel-processing-with-correlation.aspx
 
*edit

when i say explain, i mean could you tell me how i do this check from my CD. As in that the steps to preform the check on the hard drive were "right click drive C:, click properties, click Tools...." etc. What steps would i take for in the final solution?







Daniel Murphy wrote:



Final answer?

07-Aug-10



i fallow the thread however i don't see the resolved question, could you please explain the solution here? i would truly appreciate it.



if this is too much work, would you better define where i may see the solved problem?



Previous Posts In This Thread:





Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice

AJAX Web Service Driven Customers Table With Customer Details

http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorial...en-customers-table-with-customer-details.aspx
 
*edit

"Daniel Murphy" wrote in message

news:2010871060vashdanerada@myspace.com...

> when i say explain, i mean could you tell me how i do this check from my

> CD. As in that the steps to preform the check on the hard drive were

> "right click drive C:, click properties, click Tools...." etc. What steps

> would i take for in the final solution?

>

>

>

> Daniel Murphy wrote:

>

> Final answer?

> 07-Aug-10

>

> i fallow the thread however i don't see the resolved question, could you

> please explain the solution here? i would truly appreciate it.

>

> if this is too much work, would you better define where i may see the

> solved problem?

>

> Previous Posts In This Thread:

>

>

> Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice

> AJAX Web Service Driven Customers Table With Customer Details

> http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorial...en-customers-table-with-customer-details.aspx




Another d!ck-head from egghead. Thanks for reposting a 3_fu@kin' year old

thread!



--



"Don't pick a fight with an old man.

If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you."
 
Another Deadhead from Egghead posting to a 3 year old post



--

Peter



Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others

Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.

http://www.microsoft.com/protect



"Daniel Murphy" wrote in message
 
Daniel Murphy wrote:

> i fallow the thread however i don't see the resolved question,

> could you please explain the solution here? i would truly

> appreciate it.

>

> if this is too much work, would you better define where i may see

> the solved problem?




The conversation you have decided to respond to started and ended in

September of 2008. It is now August of 2010. It is highly unlikely those

who originated/participated in said conversation are still monitoring it and

may not even be using the same operating system any longer.





http://groups.google.com/group/micr...a.general/browse_frm/thread/fd4307ea10abb80d/





Also - you changed the subject of the post in your reply - that is a

significant change and might help in losing much of the original posts

meaning (in this case - definitely.)



"System Freezes During Hard Drive Error Checking" went to "Final answer?"
 
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