MBP hard drive rattling

so i just started to notice that my hard drive is making an unusual sound. it gives off an interesting rattling noise, sounding as if there is a small rock bouncing around inside the drive, which of course, there isnt.(i hope). it is very rapid, as if there is something the disk is perhaps coming in contact with as it spins. it doesnt always make this noise, but it is not a drive usage thing. i have managed to reproduce it a number of time, sometimes with high disk usage, sometimes not, sometimes with high cpu/RAM/ a fresh reboot with nothing running, very inconsistent, but still a worrying noise, as i have never heard it before and i have had it for well over a year now. it is a hitachi drive from a mid 2009 MBP. it has already been replaced once when i took it in for a new optical drive, they ran diagnostics and said the HD was fried as well. could this just be the hitachi line of hard drives? i assume its not supposed to make this noise. is there anything i can do at home before taking it in under applecare? the drive is about 8 months old give or take a few weeks.

thanks so much. i did use the almighty GOOGLE but couldnt find anything quite like it, so i thought i would ask.

Macbook Pro 15.4" 4GB DDR3 NVIDIA GeForce 9400M + 9600M GT with 512 MB, Mac OS X (10.6.4), 32GB Ipod Touch

Posted on Sep 5, 2010 6:46 PM

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16 replies

Sep 5, 2010 7:04 PM in response to Ethan Willoner

Ethan Willoner wrote:
so i just started to notice that my hard drive is making an unusual sound. it gives off an interesting rattling noise, sounding as if there is a small rock bouncing around inside the drive, which of course, there isnt.(i hope). it is very rapid, as if there is something the disk is perhaps coming in contact with as it spins. it doesnt always make this noise, but it is not a drive usage thing. i have managed to reproduce it a number of time, sometimes with high disk usage, sometimes not, sometimes with high cpu/RAM/ a fresh reboot with nothing running, very inconsistent, but still a worrying noise, as i have never heard it before and i have had it for well over a year now. it is a hitachi drive from a mid 2009 MBP. it has already been replaced once when i took it in for a new optical drive, they ran diagnostics and said the HD was fried as well. could this just be the hitachi line of hard drives? i assume its not supposed to make this noise. is there anything i can do at home before taking it in under applecare? the drive is about 8 months old give or take a few weeks.

thanks so much. i did use the almighty GOOGLE but couldnt find anything quite like it, so i thought i would ask.


Noisy drives are usually an indication of something bad. But are you sure there isn't something loose inside your MBP? I guess you could tell that if you shook your MBP.

I'd say back up your drive now with Time Machine or something similar, and be ready for disaster.

Sep 6, 2010 4:06 PM in response to OrangeMarlin

its funny, about 10 minutes after i posted this it stopped, an i havent heard it make the noise again, im still going to take it in, but for the time being i dont think its going to do anything, or perhaps the death wailings are done with, and all thats left is for it to slowly bleed to death?

i do regular backups, so with the exception of perhaps web history a hard drive failure means nothing to me, except for the fact that till it is fixed my only way of connecting to the internet is through my ipod touch...

ill repost if it starts again or if it starts making more odd noises.

Sep 12, 2010 11:26 PM in response to Ethan Willoner

so the noise has started up again, and its louder this time. im %100 percent sure its coming from the HD because i took the battery flap off and put my ear to it and i heard the sound coming from it. not only the sound, but my MBP is starting to lag horribly, hangs for no reason(even with no programs running) and is very slow. any last ideas before i take it in for a new HD? it hung to the point of being unusable about 5 times in this short message.

Sep 13, 2010 4:51 AM in response to Ethan Willoner

All the symptoms indicate to sms ( sudden motion sensor ) . It is responsible for saving your data when turning off the hard disk when g forces above threshold are experienced. If the sounds you hear are present only when the lappy is in some sort of a motion then it is the sms .If not then it can either be the sms malfunctioning or the hard drive having bad sectors .

A S.M.A.R.T. utility might return positive results while you still have bad sectors because it has a threshold of re allocated sector count before it gives you a negative result on that .. .

You can disable the sudden motion sensor and check like that to see if the noise continues .
In order to do that you need to google disable sudden motion sensor and type the code in terminal
If the sound goes away when you stop the sms and your laptop was stationary the whole time then there might be a problem with your sms which might need apple servicing

If the sound persists it's likely that your hard disk is about to go bad and you need to take precautions .I would recommend first making a surface scan to make sure you mark all bad sectors if any to stop the hard drive from trying to access them . after moving your data to another drive might be a smart way forward .

Sep 15, 2010 6:21 PM in response to Ethan Willoner

thank you everyone for all your help, but im just gonna take it in. everything i have done has turned up a clean bill or health for the drive, the smart scan, permission / disk reapirs, i even wiped the hard drive and started over and i still am getting this noise that has turned into more a a loud scratch noise. i even disabled the sms, on multiple occasions for different periods of time and it still made the noise, sms on or off. the hangs are getting worse, i am running spin control to monitor and find hangs,and some times after a hang, often a large one, nothing will come up as having caused the hang, as if it never happened, so there is something wrong that the average consumer, such as myself cant diagnose, so the best option is to have applecare servicing fix whatever it is.

Sep 15, 2010 6:37 PM in response to Ethan Willoner

yah, it definitely is going to die, its only a question of when. i do keep regular backups, so losing data isnt an issue. i just hope i can get it in before it dies, otherwise i would leave me at the mercy of my ipod touch and a 2004 windows pc...

now just as a side note, this is my second hard drive to die on my MBP, is there something i could be doing to make them die like this?

Sep 15, 2010 6:53 PM in response to Ethan Willoner

well . .if you understand a hard drive's insides you might treat them more gently..
there is a metal disc which spins more than 5000 times a minute there with a surface covered with bazillion magnetic particles so sensitive that they can be manipulated magnetically thus resulting in data ..

And two heads that fly micrometers away from that surface reading and writing constantly ..Vibrations can and very frequently cause those heads to come in contact with the surface physically damaging the disk ..creating a bad sector .. the drive works by an intelligent map where each sector is recorded and the heads move accordingly and when the OS tells the drive to go and read from a bad sector the head gets confused since there is no data there no 0 no 1 that is unacceptable for an electric driven brainless machine ..

this is what you are experiencing .. so in short you need to treat your machine with a feather pillow when it's in use ..

OR go and get yourself an SSD like I did and you can toss it around like there is no tomorrow 🙂

Sep 15, 2010 7:45 PM in response to Ethan Willoner

i understand the inner workings of a hard drive, and to be exact my hard drive spins at 5400rpm. i was just interested to see what people thought might be happening. the funny thing is that my laptop sits on a sturdy desk, and never moves while it is on the desk. when i do move it around my house, perhaps to my bed or couch, i close the lid and leave it for about a minute to ensure the drives are no longer spinning. when traveling, it is always off, and never on in a car, bus, or whatever. i have a laptop bag that has the most padding of any bag i can find, the entire case is half inch padding minimum, with more on the bottom incase you were to drop it. this is why i could not see it being bad sector, and was reinforced by the fact that the smart scan was turning up no bad sectors.

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MBP hard drive rattling

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