From nguyen kim thai on Thu, 08 Jul 1999
Dear Sir.
How are you? I'm Writing to ask you How can I using my hdd with track 0 bad? Please reply me as soon as you can. yours
LinhNGO
I presume that you mean that track 0 SECTOR 1 is bad.
In that case the way to use the disk is as a door stop, or paper weight. They aren't heavy enough to be used as boat anchors and they aren't aerodynamic enough for use as Frisbees(TM)
For years I've thought that HD manufacturers should have a setting on the drive (possibly in NVRAM) which would contain the CHS (cylinder, head, sector) address of the virtual track zero. (Even just a cylinder sector value set by jumpers would be something).
I suspect that most modern drives (IDE and SCSI) do apply some of the same bad sector management to their diagnostic and track 0 handling as they do the rest of the drive.
These vary among drive models but, as I've said before, the integrated electronics that operate most disk drives are running rather sophisticated firmware for managing their cachine, bad sector remapping, error recovery and detection (with logging and data migration) etc.
So "bad spots" on the disk surface generally should not cause much trouble that would be visible to the user or the OS (on most late model drives). The problems we usually see are those that affect the whole drive (a head dies, taking a whole side of a whole platter with it, a spindle developes "stiction" and the whole set of platter just doesn't spin, a motor fails or the voice coils that move the head arm set toward and away from the hub get fried). Those are the sorts of things that all result in losing the whole drive --- or massive portions of it.
(For stiction you can sometimes get it "kick started" by dropping the drive several inches unto a reasonably hard surface, for other failures you can go to specialty service and repair shops --- which are much more expensive than replacing the drive. Those are are mostly used to ATTEMPT to recover the data that hasn't been backed up.)
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