Your hard disk is a TOSHIBA MK5065GSX with firmware GJ003A.
The average temperature for this hard disk is 37C (MIN=28C MAX=47C) and yours is 62C.
NOTE : your hard disk has 30 reallocated sectors. Hard disks do have spare sectors (usually from 256 up to 1024) used to replace bad ones. This remapping operation is transparent to the end user. Anyway, this can lead to degradated performances (because remapped sectors are in different places of the disk than the original ones and the head needs additional moving). If reallocated sectors grow over time, you might encounter some serious troubles. A backup of the most important data is suggested anyway.
NOTE : your hard disk has 1 pending sectors. Those are sectors that couldn't be properly read and that the hard disk logic is waiting for a write operation to try to remap to a spare sector (if available). According to the Reallocated Sector Count attribute, your hard disk seems to have available spare sectors. A simple disk surface scan won't be enough to force the remap operation. You need a read/write surface scan to remap the sector. The best option should be a tool that knows about what should be read from that sector so that it has some option to apply the best fix to the missing data.
NOTE : your hard disk Power On Hours Count attribute current value (86) is below the normal range (96 - 100) reported for your specific hard disk model. Basically your hard disk was powered on for more than the maximum time the average user did. This means that either all of the reports collected are from hard disks that were not powered on for too long (this is realistic for recent models) or that your hard disk is becoming old. Usually this is not considered as a pre-failure advisory, but you should check whether you want to replace the hardware or keep an eye on its performances over ti
apachusque escribió:Pues mira, eso no lo sabía...
Por cierto, el HD ya va por 54![]()
Me parece que voy a levantar un poco el portatil, poniendo pinzas de la ropa o algo debajo, a ver si así el calor se va antes o algo... Me está comiendo la moral este tema ya, narices!!!
Un saludo.
apachusque escribió:Hombre, quizá con los sobremesa, pero esto es un portatil, por lo que la misma batería hace de SAI (siempre está enchufado).
Bueno, gracias de todas formas. En cuanto pueda cambiaré el disco duro, por otro de otra marca. No vuelvo a montar un Toshiba en mi vida. Buscaré WD, Seagate, incluso Samsung, pero ¿Toshiba? Vamos, que llevo 2 de 2...
Es increible que tenga discos duros de 40 Gb con millones de horas de vuelo y el SMART me diga que están más sanos que el nuevo.
Por cierto, 30 (¿31?) sectores defectuosos no servirán para acudir a la garantía, ¿verdad? He ido a la web de Toshiba y tienen un comprobador HDD/SDD y me dice que el disco está como una rosa... Ni se molesta en mirar la información del SMART. Hasta en eso son malos.
Un saludo.
NOTE : your hard disk has 30 reallocated sectors. Hard disks do have spare sectors (usually from 256 up to 1024) used to replace bad ones. This remapping operation is transparent to the end user. Anyway, this can lead to degradated performances (because remapped sectors are in different places of the disk than the original ones and the head needs additional moving). If reallocated sectors grow over time, you might encounter some serious troubles. A backup of the most important data is suggested anyway.
NOTE : your hard disk has 1 pending sectors. Those are sectors that couldn't be properly read and that the hard disk logic is waiting for a write operation to try to remap to a spare sector (if available). According to the Reallocated Sector Count attribute, your hard disk seems to have available spare sectors. A simple disk surface scan won't be enough to force the remap operation. You need a read/write surface scan to remap the sector. The best option should be a tool that knows about what should be read from that sector so that it has some option to apply the best fix to the missing data.
Rascanalgao escribió:Estás seguro que no tienes virus? es muy raro que el disco duro esté siempre funcionando.