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re: Question about 'Prevent file corruption problems'
Tuesday, September 23, 2003 at 10:27 am Windows XP Annoyances Discussion Forum
Posted by Jim
(7 messages posted)
All these problems seem all too familiar. Had built my machine in March....ran great
with XP home (NTFS). About a month ago my hard drive (120 GB Maxtor) crashed after
a reboot. Just a simple reboot. Received message "disk read error" (or something
like that). I had no problems till then. The only thing I had done was 2 weeks prior
to this crash was installl extra memory. And 1 week prior install a sencond hard
drive (120 GB Maxtor) to my RAID promise controler. I took the hard drive out and
slaved it off another XP machine. Upon trying to gain excess to this drive I recieved
the error "file or directory is corrupted and unreadable". Cost me $500.00 to have
a recovery place retrieve all my lost pictures and imoprtant files (like a fool did
not back-up on CD). Anyway, I purchased a new hard drive, another 120 GB maxtor hard
drive, formated with NTFS WINXP, and loaded some of my programs, email, etc. Suddenly
a few days later started getting file corruptions again. Messages told me to run
check disk. When I went to run check disk (under tools and check now) nothing would
happen. Almost like a dead function. I click the button and nothing would happen.
I used the command window and typed in "CHKDSK" and I would recieve the messsage
"file or directory is corrupted and unreadable". I could not even used the check
disk to fix the disk. The diagnostics of winXP was corrupted. I rebooted with a continuous
reboot happening over and over again. WinXP would not boot up. I slaved the drive
off my working XP machine and gained access to the files in there, with a bunch missing
(like outlook PST files). I used this second XP machine to do a CHKDSK on this screwed
up drive......found problems and fixed them. But, it would still not function in
my main computer, just keep rebooting by itself. Now my second machine running XP
has been a dream. Not one problem. Both using an NTFS format. Only difference is
my main machine uses a RAID controller with two 120 GB maxtor hard drives (one being
the boot drive).
I redid the hard drive with a fresh NTFS load and winXP, using the win XP disk for
this. Ran great for a few days, then a file corruption came up. Quickly ran CHKDSK.
Found problems, fixed them, and kept running fine. So whats the real sollution here?
Run CHKDSK every chance you get?? Kill the power suddenly instead of letting winXP
shut it down.....does that include a reboot??? Try some of the suggestions from above??
I have to use NTFS for my file system because I connect my DV camera to the computer
and save my video to the hard drive for converting over to a DVD format to burn to
a DVD. Most of these files are over 4 GB which a FAT32 does not support.
So any more ideas would be great help. Thanks.
On Monday, September 15, 2003 at 3:04 pm, James S. wrote:
>I am having this same type problem. I run chkdsk from the command line prompt and
>consistently see the error,
>Correcting errors in the master file table's (MFT) BITMAP attribute.
>Correcting errors in the Volume Bitmap.
>--------------
>I have this compaq presario, windows xp or prof., brand new pc since 11/02. Just
>recently, over the past 4 to 8 weeks, I am not able to correct the problem above.
>A couple of the newsgroups from yahoo suggest that the HDD is corrupt. Also, HP/Compaq
>say the same, corrupt. I was introduced to the 6 floppy disk set of xp boot disk
>setup. Was told to delete the partition and start over. Tried this several times.
>No success. Tried several FDISK's, no success. Early this morning, after doing a
>disk sanitizer, windows IS able to fix the errors above. AFTER I install most of
>the critical updates, I have the errors, again. Have tried both, c.l.i. or the 'c'
>drive icon, properties, tools, check now. Neither will fix the errors. I have tried
>20 attempts. I have a LOW tolerance if a problem CANNOT fix a problem. Windows did
>crash due to a re-boot. I am getting the report, the HDD is not dirty. I will try
>the suggestion, format in fat32. If you have any comments, feel free to e-mail me,
>js8jim@msn.com Thank you, JIM
>=================================
>
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All messages in this thread [show all]
 |  |  | re: Question about 'Prevent file corruption problems' (Jim: Tue, Sep 23, 2003, 10:27 am) |
 |  |  | Sins of NTFS (Down For The Count: Thu, Jan 22, 2004, 8:22 pm) |
 |  | re: (Tong Narak: Tue, Jan 25, 2005, 6:43 pm) |
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