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Can a virus corrupt a hard disk?

Can a virus corrupt a hard disk?

"Shorter version:
Hard disk corrupt, vendor claims warranty does not apply since it was ""due to a virus"" and ""problems due to software are not covered under the warranty""."

Asked by: Guest | Views: 264
Total answers/comments: 2
Guest [Entry]

"This Dell technician is partly right. In the past, there were viruses which could damage a hard disk. They did this my moving the read-head of the drive to a sector outside the existing range, causing the head to bump against the internal frame of the drive itself, causing damage to the disk. But that was almost 25 to 30 years ago and hard disks have become more robust ever since.

Now, it is possible that something went wrong inside the BIOS settings of this laptop, thus the BIOS won't recognize the hard disk anymore, or just can't access it. This could be some virus trying to damage the firmware or just a user messing with the wrong settings. Restoring the proper BIOS settings should fix it, although you would need to know those settings first.

Finally, if you have warranty on the hardware then it doesn't exactly matter how it got damaged beyond repair. It is broken so they have to fix it. (Although you might want to check the warranty papers that you received with your purchase for exact details.) Do make it clear that you demand a replacement for this disk, which falls under the warranty. (Else, be prepared to ask for legal advise!)

I myself have a Dell desktop. I know they install their OS from a special disk image instead of doing an official setup. A regular setup would just format the disk, mark bad sectors and do a bunch of other stuff to make sure the disk is okay. Restoring a disk image won't do such checks but just does a quick format before putting the image back. If this fails for whatever reason, oops..."
Guest [Entry]

"I think you are misunderstanding what the technicion is saying. If someone says a drive is corrupt that refers to the data on the drive, not the hardware. Corruption may be caused by physical damage or non physical such as a powercut or virus. If there is no physical damage then you don't need a replacement drive, you just need to reformat it.

You can't 'repair' because the partition is corrupted so this needs to be deleted by reformatting and then you need to reinstall windows. The Dell install disk gives you this option. If you see an existing partition on the drive delete it and recreate a new one for the install.

If you have data on the drive that you need to keep, you may be able to recover it by attaching it to another machine. If you don't know what you are doing take it to a professional (although this may well be expensive) without trying yourself because it is easy to render the data unrecoverable."