Interrupted OSX install on drive and now it's full of bad blocks?
Powerbook G4 1.67 GHZ with Dual-DVI, Mac OS X (10.4)
Powerbook G4 1.67 GHZ with Dual-DVI, Mac OS X (10.4)
If so, selecting it should enable the
"Partition" tab & partitioning the drive (with one or
more volumes) should cause it to map out any actual
bad blocks it (the drive itself) discovers during the
process.
AFAIK, the "Zero out data" option applies to
data partitions but not to the normally
invisible partition that contains the partition type
itself; for instance, an Apple Partition Scheme. (If
this were not the case, the drive would require
reformatting after erasure, since all partition info
would be lost.)
In all cases, the drive itself actually discovers &
maps out bad blocks.
Either way, it should be
obvious that any "housekeeping" partitions will not
be zeroed, so it is incorrect to suggest that all
potentially bad blocks on the drive will be
discovered by erasure, even with the zero option.
When using the zero out data option it still shows
the I/O errors.
The Drive Genius scan stopped half thru presumably
because it couldn't proceed past the bad blocks.
Strange you'd expect a scan to finish regardless but
this one didn't. My system.log is full of I/O errors.
According to the tech from MicroMat, this is not necessarily true.
Certainly, that will delete the partion information ...
Interrupted OSX install on drive and now it's full of bad blocks?