I have a 4TB WD Elements that’s failing. Areas of the disk that can’t be read, etc. CrystalDisk reports a condition Red - Bad, and right now, running CCleaner on it to do a 7-pass wipe to see if it can finish, it says it will take 2067 days, so, not likely.

Is it likely that this issue is the drive itself, the controller going bad, or a combination? Is it worth pulling the hard drive and installing something like a WD Black in it to help improve reliability?

  • ionhowtoB
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    1 year ago

    I’m not sure but i think I did a detailed video on it too showing the duobond chip or whatever its called.

    I out an old toshiba in an elements enclosure. It’s easy to store and rhe usb interface is great!

  • msdesignfotoB
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    1 year ago

    I had two external drives failing in the same way. One was a WD, the other was a Lacie. Both network access drives.

    They both stopped showing the disk in explorer, but I could retrieve the hard drive and plug them into my computer. With UFS explorer, I copied all the wanted files from the hard drive, with no errors. Then formated the hard drive (the one inside the Lacie box). The WD was more recently and at work, I still have it plugged inside my computer if anyone needs anything from there (which I doubt, since I copied most important stuff already).

    The Lacie box actually had a WD hard drive inside, which I still use today as a regular internal HDD.

    Now, if they actually show in explorer but you have errors, then maybe it is actually the hard drive failing.

    My advice: uninstall CCleaner, copy over the files you need, if you can, and format the drive. If the issues persist, like slow access, error copying files over, do one last thing before you trash it: plug it into a diferent sata port. If it doesn’t read well, forget the disk.