Question:
Can cloning a hard drive cause clicking sounds upon boot on the new cloned drive?
elecbass100
2011-12-23 08:57:31 UTC
For reference, my old drive is http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148469 , my new drive is http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148767

I had to send the brand-new drive back in early December because it was making 5 or 6 audible clicks upon boot. Otherwise though, it worked fine, cloned successfully, no errors, nice and fast. But to be on the safe side, I sent it back because there should be no clicking whatsoever (besides the normal start-up spinning).

I have just gotten a replacement of the new drive. I wanted to make sure history does not repeat; I am not certain whether the drive from the get-go was making boot-up clicking sounds, or if it was due in any part to the cloning of the old drive, since I noticed the audible clicking 2 days after I cloned the old drive onto it. People have told me the following doesn't matter, but I'll just mention for more reference that the old drive was having bad sector errors, loads of them, even though everything still works fine, for now. The old drive never made the clicking sounds at boot-up or otherwise that the new drive was making. But I was wondering if cloning that old drive contributed at all to the new drive clicking upon boot.

thanks for feedback.
Four answers:
G Man
2011-12-23 09:06:45 UTC
Cloning a hard drive is just reading all the data from one hard drive and writing the data to another hard drive. There's nothing special about as far as the hard drive is concerned - it's the same as reading or writing any type of data. Cloning a hard drive does NOT make physical changes to the hard drive that could explain it making a new sound.



A hard drive suddenly making clicking noises could be symptomatic of a hardware problem. It depends on what type of noise it's making. Checking the hard drive for bad sectors is prudent, and was probably already done by whatever program cloned the hard drive.
?
2016-11-30 05:40:04 UTC
What are you going to apply to clone the force? Are you basically going to make a picture and then image the hot force interior the pc? doing a immediately replica from one force to the different and then attempting besides off of it won't artwork. i might recommend making a picture of the force making use of a application like Norton ghost. as quickly as you have that image, you may get a sparkling force on your pc. Use a boot CD and replica the image out of your exterior force to the hot HD. you will desire to then be stable to flow. so some distance as swapping out drives go, pc force are frequently held in place by using a pair of screws on the backside. get rid of them and slide out the force. without understanding what pc you have, i'm no longer able to get from now on particular than that. stable success.
?
2011-12-23 09:09:12 UTC
If you clone your old hard drive with bad sector, you can also transfer it to new hard drive. Maybe there is another problem that causing your hard drive on it. Check you AVR if your have one or power supply, the power output on your area should be stable and not fluctuating.
Sasha Whitefur
2011-12-23 10:31:00 UTC
A clicking HD, is usually a sign, of a failing HD.


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