You're wasting your time (and it would seem maybe ours as well now ;-). You need to replace that HD or at LEAST start all over again with a reformat with all those HD issues. You never mentioned you had so many HD problems. You can't expect a HD to operate properly with that many bad sectors. That's what's taking so long to scan and why it's so slow--too many bad sectors.
You run scandisk in DOS by hitting the F5 or F8 repeatedly while booting (can't recall which), then I think you hit [shift-F5] at the menu to get to the command prompt. It will say at the bottom of the screen if it's [shift-F5]. Then at the C: prompt type scandisk. But, I doubt now that's going to help much. Depending on how much data Vs. free space you have on the drive, it MIGHT be able to map out the bad sectors and avoid them, but you're better off getting a new HD. -Clint God Bless Clint Hamilton, Owner http://OrpheusComputing.com ----- Original Message ----- From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> In a message dated 9/4/2004 5:32:34 AM Eastern Daylight Time, orpheuscomputing.com writes: > If you're saying that it's taking days to run a scanner, then something is > seriously wrong. Well, lets put it this way, I haven't shut off my computer in 3.5 days! I normally shut it off when I'm not using it. I can't see wasting all that electricity for something that's not being used. 3.5 days ago I started my anti-spyware check. It should only take about 10 to 15 minutes to do everything it's supposed to do. According to it, I have about 33000 files that it has to check through. It's now just past 18000. By my calculations, unless it suddenly picks up a great deal of speed, it should complete this one single scanning effort around, oh, the 21st or 23rd of Sept.!!!! I may be crazy, and sometimes I'll go out of my way to prove that I am, but I think one month is a wee bit rediculous to wait for ANY kind of a system scan to complete it's job, wouldn't you? I don't know if you mean it's running in the BG all the time, or this happens when you do > a manual scan and it takes this long to scan your files. I started the manual scan on the 1st of Sept. at 3:30 p.m.. Normally it only takes about 15 minutes to run the whole thing. (Now I'M starting to sound like a broken record, and, being a vinyl junkie, I HATE broken records!!) If the latter, then you're HD may be screwed up. Well, when I'm able to run scandisk, which doesn't always run fully and sometimes doesn't even start up, it tells me that there are something like 360,000 bad sectors. Do a chkdsk or scandisk of each HD > and or partition. I'd love to! The last few times I tried it would go at least 3/4 of the way through and then start over again. It just keeps doing this for as long as I keep it running. Once it even went as far as about 95% of the way and then started over again!! I have no problems with it at all on the D drive or even the A drive. I don't recall how to do this in ME, I think you right click each drive or partition in "My > computer" and then "tools", then you'll see the error > checking button. Start/programs/accessories/sytem tools/scandisk If you haven't defrag'd yet then do that as well. I did that twice this past weekend and usually do it once every sunday after I get off line. I only did it the second time this weekend, because I copied about 11 gig of stuff over yto the D drive after I already ran defrag. On the D I have no problems running defrag, on the C it can be annoying. First it takes about 10 to 15 just to start up, then, once it get's going, from about the 3/4 mark onwards, it runs through about a dozen rows of those little blue cubes on the screen and then it has to start all over again. This can go on for about an hour. > Also run scandisk in DOS and let it also do the long version. I've never done that, nor do I know how. If that doesn't fix the problem, then I'd seriously recommend you run some HD b> enchmarks and post the results. Sandra diagnostics, HDtach and AIDA32 > (its HD tests are under "plugins") are all free and you can find them at any > search engine. It would also be a good idea to run the HD manufacturer's > diagnostics which you get from their website. You should first of course be sure > you have no malware on the HD since if you do the results could be tainted. How can I find that out if I can't run the scans? It's like the old Chico Marx line: How can I find out what I wanna find out if it won't let me find out what I wanna find out? Dale ============= PCWorks Mailing List ================= Don't see your post? Check our posting guidelines & make sure you've followed proper posting procedures, http://pcworkers.com/rules.htm Contact list owner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Unsubscribing and other changes: http://pcworkers.com =====================================================
