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- Posts
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- OS
- Windows 11
Recently, when working and saving to an internal m.2 DATA drive (D) my machine will hang. Most times when I try to reboot it hangs. Shutting down and restarting again. it usually halts with the message of a bad shutdown and suggests going into the BIOS. I go in, then exit, and the machine again starts normally. However, I notice sometimes problems with accessing the D drive. (no problems with other disks) I'm now trying to copy the files on this disk to an external backup. I can do it for a while, but often if I try to copy a large amount the copy function hangs the D drive becomes inaccessible and Explorer hangs. However, I can keep workings on other things. Could this be a Heat problem? The machine runs usually is running between 50-70c degrees.
I feel like this copying problem is an intermittent D drive, the same when Startup trying to access it and failing. Usually, If I shut down and walk away for a good while, when I start again it works till explorer hangs with a file transfer to D. Assuming I'm right, could this be some sort of corruption and a Windows format of the drive would salvage it? Or is this a deteriorating drive that should be replaced? I haven't gone into this machine (or any other) since I built it a couple yeas ago, and with liquid cooling I'm loathe to disassemble it again. Of course, If that's the only option...
Disk management shows:
Disk 0 (D) 1TB Healthy (Basic Data partition)
Disk 1 (C) 1TB Windows. Everything Healthy.
Disk 2 (E) 500 GB Healthy (Basic Data partition)
My Machine is a SFF build with these parts.
Windows 11 Pro 64
Sugo SG13B case.
ASUS ROG STRIX I-B550
AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
NVIDIA GTX1060 6gb
Corsair Vengance LPX 16GB Kit (2x8GB Modules) 3200MHz DDR4 DIMM
Corsair H60 AIO cooler
I feel like this copying problem is an intermittent D drive, the same when Startup trying to access it and failing. Usually, If I shut down and walk away for a good while, when I start again it works till explorer hangs with a file transfer to D. Assuming I'm right, could this be some sort of corruption and a Windows format of the drive would salvage it? Or is this a deteriorating drive that should be replaced? I haven't gone into this machine (or any other) since I built it a couple yeas ago, and with liquid cooling I'm loathe to disassemble it again. Of course, If that's the only option...
Disk management shows:
Disk 0 (D) 1TB Healthy (Basic Data partition)
Disk 1 (C) 1TB Windows. Everything Healthy.
Disk 2 (E) 500 GB Healthy (Basic Data partition)
My Machine is a SFF build with these parts.
Windows 11 Pro 64
Sugo SG13B case.
ASUS ROG STRIX I-B550
AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
NVIDIA GTX1060 6gb
Corsair Vengance LPX 16GB Kit (2x8GB Modules) 3200MHz DDR4 DIMM
Corsair H60 AIO cooler
My Computers
-
At a glance
Windows 11Ryzen 9 9900XG.SKILL DDR5 Flare X5 64GB 6000 CL30-40-40-96RTX 4060 6GB- OS
- Windows 11
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Home Built
- CPU
- Ryzen 9 9900X
- Motherboard
- ROG STRIX B850-I
- Memory
- G.SKILL DDR5 Flare X5 64GB 6000 CL30-40-40-96
- Graphics Card(s)
- RTX 4060 6GB
- Sound Card
- Onboard Realtek
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Dual Dell U3014
- Screen Resolution
- 2560x1600
- Hard Drives
- Samsung EVO m.2 2TB, Silicon Power m.2 2TB
- PSU
- Corsair Modular SFX 750W
- Case
- Lan-Li H2O
- Cooling
- NZXT KRAKEN 240 AIO
-
At a glance
Windows 11i7-9750H16gbNVIDIA GeForce RTX2070 Q-Max- Operating System
- Windows 11
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- MSI GS75 Stealth 9sf
- CPU
- i7-9750H
- Motherboard
- MS 17-G1
- Memory
- 16gb
- Graphics card(s)
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX2070 Q-Max




