So, here's the deal - I've been trying for the last 4 hours to make a copy of an old Windows XP mechanical hard drive, which has some bad sectors/damaged blocks. The total appears to be around 600 bad sectors, or between 2.5% and 15% damaged blocks, depending on which scanner I use (I'm assuming that 'bad sectors' and 'damaged blocks' are the same thing, but maybe not?
). The drive still works btw, but could well be on its way out...
Anyway, tried Mini Tool Partition Wizard (which has worked for me in the past), Aomei, Macrium Reflect, Easus ToDo, and at least one other whose name I don't recall. All of them failed, generating an error message about bad sectors, but only after I'd sat through the cloning process for 20/30/40 minutes on each occasion. If these programs can't deal with bad sectors, why don't they come clean about that upfront, or at least perform some sort of diagnostic test on the hdd to establish whether or not they are capable of cloning it?
On the positive side, I did learn a fair bit about the hdd removal and replacement procedure for the laptop in question (a Thinkpad T60), and at least the XP drive still boots up after all the torture I put it through. But seriously, does anyone know a foolproof method of dealing with this, or at least one which has a fair chance of success? I'm sure I read a few months ago about a utility that could handle cloning a hard drive with bad sectors, but can't for the life of me recall what it was, and it definitely wasn't one of the ones mentioned above.
_________________
On a mountain range
I'm Doctor Strange