I'm trying to resolve some issues that my mother-in-law's laptop has been having. Upon startup, before getting to the boot sequence, I'm seeing a black screen that says:
"SMART Hard Disk Error
The SMART hard disk check has detected an imminent failure. To ensure no data loss, please backup the content immediately and run the Hard Disk Test in System Diagnostics.
Hard Disk 1 (301)
F2 System Diagnostics
ENTER - Continue Startup"
I continued startup and the operating system was mostly stable. However, there was a popup that said:
"Windows detected a hard disk problem. Back up your files immediately to prevent information loss, and then contact computer manufacturer to determine if you need to repair or replace the disk." Then it gives me options to backup, or ask again later.
Looking up a couple things and thinking about it, it sounds like a physical problem rather than a virtual problem. It said to back everything up and avoid using the computer before determining if it could be repaired or if it should be replaced, but she has the recovery disks and all that.
So I went to the hard drive properties and started a disk check - said it couldn't run while it's in use. I had it start the disk check before booting and restarted the computer. It's currently going through CHDSK, but things aren't looking good.
CHDSK is verifying files (stage 1 of 5)
As of this post, while only 6% complete, file record segments are unreadable from segments 172,680 through 172,700 and counting out of 258,308 file records.
Does this mean she needs a new hard drive? If so many segments are unreadable so early in the disk check, it doesn't sound like a reformat would help much. If I get a new hard drive, will it be easy to get everything going using the recovery disks that were created from her PC?