- Jun 6, 2001
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When I defragment my harddrive, I see fairly large areas of the disk that represent data that will not be moved. My assumption is that the more data that can't be moved on my disk, the worse the performance will get.
What causes these unmovable clusters? Is there a critical mass of unmovable clusters that when reached will make the drive impossible to defragment? Or are these unmovable clusters permanently defragmented and actually as fast or faster than other parts of the harddrive?
What causes bad sectors?
Thanks in advance
What causes these unmovable clusters? Is there a critical mass of unmovable clusters that when reached will make the drive impossible to defragment? Or are these unmovable clusters permanently defragmented and actually as fast or faster than other parts of the harddrive?
What causes bad sectors?
Thanks in advance