[2022/08/31 21:31:31.641, jusched.exe (PID: 151636, TID: 157144), AllUtils.cpp:124 (logit)]
INFO: **************** Running jusched ****************
Thank You so much for a quick reply. I really appreciate it. Will do as suggested.Your drives all appear fine, as I expected. You provided us with the path where the log is located, delete it from there as suggested. Then download and run malwarebytes free edition on all of the drives.
Changing the cable is good advice. You know how many drives I have ran CDinfo on that it flagged as good, that turned out were bad? Zero.Uh, those SMART stats are not good. Check the CRC error count!
Try changing the SATA cable.
The CRC value should be zero if there wasn't a problem. Now that it has reported CRC errors, the way you judge that the problem is fixed is if the CRC value stays put (6D15).
I would strongly recommend against a reinstall until that problem is dealt with, and I'd keep an eye on that value for at least a month.
You know how many drives I have ran CDinfo on that it flagged as good, that turned out were bad? Zero.
And read closer, repair install, not reinstall.
You should put that down vote back, it was deserved. Not considering a faulty cable immediately, shows I have been away from the game the last 3yrs.You haven't encountered enough dodgy drive situations then 😀 For example, the SMART data of a drive that's intermittently not powering up will show up as seemingly fine. Bad sectors can be picked up by the OS rather than the drive itself.
I use three indicators for diagnosing storage-related problems:
1 - SMART data
2 - full chkdsk
3 - Windows system log: disk/ntfs/ahcidriver warnings/errors
Ideally, all three will concur, but I've replaced plenty of drives with 'OK' SMART data because of say bad sectors resulting in Windows not booting.
My post wasn't intended as a broadside on your post in general, so please don't take it that way. However, with a drive reporting lots of CRC errors, a repair install still might end up in a worse situation than it was intended to fix, because it involves a shedload of writes to a drive that clearly is having communication issues. NTFS is quite resilient, but I've seen it get trashed more than once as a result of CRC issues.