Copying file drops to 0B/s












2















I wanted to restore my data from a backup (HDD to HDD) but this one file (a movie >11GB) drops the transfer speed to 0B/s at 33%. I guess a movie with some missing bytes should work anyway?



I guess this one file is corrupted (because I successfully copied every other file) which is no (big) loss but is there a way to "hard copy" the file anyway?



EDIT: even Roadkil's Unstoppable Copier stops at 33% (still responding but the copy progress stands still). The file transfer stops but Windows 10 Task Manager shows the HDD at 100% workload.










share|improve this question

























  • Please update your question to state where you are restoring the data from - external drive, over the network, or..?

    – FastEthernet
    May 28 '17 at 20:01











  • @FastEthernet from HDD to HDD (updated Q)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:02











  • I know it's a older question but have you tried running fsck? Boot from a Linux live CD/USB and run sudo fsck /dev/sda1 (where /dev/sda1 is the partition with the movie). Also, you could use CrystalDiskInfo to check the drive's SMART status (and then post a screenshot).

    – Zackary
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:58
















2















I wanted to restore my data from a backup (HDD to HDD) but this one file (a movie >11GB) drops the transfer speed to 0B/s at 33%. I guess a movie with some missing bytes should work anyway?



I guess this one file is corrupted (because I successfully copied every other file) which is no (big) loss but is there a way to "hard copy" the file anyway?



EDIT: even Roadkil's Unstoppable Copier stops at 33% (still responding but the copy progress stands still). The file transfer stops but Windows 10 Task Manager shows the HDD at 100% workload.










share|improve this question

























  • Please update your question to state where you are restoring the data from - external drive, over the network, or..?

    – FastEthernet
    May 28 '17 at 20:01











  • @FastEthernet from HDD to HDD (updated Q)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:02











  • I know it's a older question but have you tried running fsck? Boot from a Linux live CD/USB and run sudo fsck /dev/sda1 (where /dev/sda1 is the partition with the movie). Also, you could use CrystalDiskInfo to check the drive's SMART status (and then post a screenshot).

    – Zackary
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:58














2












2








2








I wanted to restore my data from a backup (HDD to HDD) but this one file (a movie >11GB) drops the transfer speed to 0B/s at 33%. I guess a movie with some missing bytes should work anyway?



I guess this one file is corrupted (because I successfully copied every other file) which is no (big) loss but is there a way to "hard copy" the file anyway?



EDIT: even Roadkil's Unstoppable Copier stops at 33% (still responding but the copy progress stands still). The file transfer stops but Windows 10 Task Manager shows the HDD at 100% workload.










share|improve this question
















I wanted to restore my data from a backup (HDD to HDD) but this one file (a movie >11GB) drops the transfer speed to 0B/s at 33%. I guess a movie with some missing bytes should work anyway?



I guess this one file is corrupted (because I successfully copied every other file) which is no (big) loss but is there a way to "hard copy" the file anyway?



EDIT: even Roadkil's Unstoppable Copier stops at 33% (still responding but the copy progress stands still). The file transfer stops but Windows 10 Task Manager shows the HDD at 100% workload.







windows-10 file-transfer






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 28 '17 at 20:02







Pali

















asked May 28 '17 at 19:02









PaliPali

153111




153111













  • Please update your question to state where you are restoring the data from - external drive, over the network, or..?

    – FastEthernet
    May 28 '17 at 20:01











  • @FastEthernet from HDD to HDD (updated Q)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:02











  • I know it's a older question but have you tried running fsck? Boot from a Linux live CD/USB and run sudo fsck /dev/sda1 (where /dev/sda1 is the partition with the movie). Also, you could use CrystalDiskInfo to check the drive's SMART status (and then post a screenshot).

    – Zackary
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:58



















  • Please update your question to state where you are restoring the data from - external drive, over the network, or..?

    – FastEthernet
    May 28 '17 at 20:01











  • @FastEthernet from HDD to HDD (updated Q)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:02











  • I know it's a older question but have you tried running fsck? Boot from a Linux live CD/USB and run sudo fsck /dev/sda1 (where /dev/sda1 is the partition with the movie). Also, you could use CrystalDiskInfo to check the drive's SMART status (and then post a screenshot).

    – Zackary
    Nov 30 '18 at 20:58

















Please update your question to state where you are restoring the data from - external drive, over the network, or..?

– FastEthernet
May 28 '17 at 20:01





Please update your question to state where you are restoring the data from - external drive, over the network, or..?

– FastEthernet
May 28 '17 at 20:01













@FastEthernet from HDD to HDD (updated Q)

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 20:02





@FastEthernet from HDD to HDD (updated Q)

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 20:02













I know it's a older question but have you tried running fsck? Boot from a Linux live CD/USB and run sudo fsck /dev/sda1 (where /dev/sda1 is the partition with the movie). Also, you could use CrystalDiskInfo to check the drive's SMART status (and then post a screenshot).

– Zackary
Nov 30 '18 at 20:58





I know it's a older question but have you tried running fsck? Boot from a Linux live CD/USB and run sudo fsck /dev/sda1 (where /dev/sda1 is the partition with the movie). Also, you could use CrystalDiskInfo to check the drive's SMART status (and then post a screenshot).

– Zackary
Nov 30 '18 at 20:58










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Try running CHKDSK on the drive where the movie is located that you wish to copy. This will help identify any damaged sectors that may lead to read errors.
You can do that in the following way;




  • Open 'This PC'

  • Right-click on the drive where your movie is located

  • Click 'Properties'

  • Click the 'Tools' tab

  • Click the 'Check' button


If there are any errors found, Windows will try to repair them. You may be asked to restart your computer, depending on what drive it is due to access restrictions.



If that doesn't work or as an alternative to running CHKDSK, you can try compressing the file to a ZIP folder.




  • Right click the movie file

  • Go to 'Send to'

  • Click 'Compressed (zipped) folder'


Now you can try copying the ZIP-file containing the movie to another drive. If zipping the movie file fails, the file may be corrupted beyond the abilities Windows has to offer to repair it.






share|improve this answer
























  • chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:51











  • Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:55













  • @Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

    – David
    May 28 '17 at 21:07











  • In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

    – Luchador95
    May 28 '17 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 21:47













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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Try running CHKDSK on the drive where the movie is located that you wish to copy. This will help identify any damaged sectors that may lead to read errors.
You can do that in the following way;




  • Open 'This PC'

  • Right-click on the drive where your movie is located

  • Click 'Properties'

  • Click the 'Tools' tab

  • Click the 'Check' button


If there are any errors found, Windows will try to repair them. You may be asked to restart your computer, depending on what drive it is due to access restrictions.



If that doesn't work or as an alternative to running CHKDSK, you can try compressing the file to a ZIP folder.




  • Right click the movie file

  • Go to 'Send to'

  • Click 'Compressed (zipped) folder'


Now you can try copying the ZIP-file containing the movie to another drive. If zipping the movie file fails, the file may be corrupted beyond the abilities Windows has to offer to repair it.






share|improve this answer
























  • chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:51











  • Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:55













  • @Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

    – David
    May 28 '17 at 21:07











  • In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

    – Luchador95
    May 28 '17 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 21:47


















0














Try running CHKDSK on the drive where the movie is located that you wish to copy. This will help identify any damaged sectors that may lead to read errors.
You can do that in the following way;




  • Open 'This PC'

  • Right-click on the drive where your movie is located

  • Click 'Properties'

  • Click the 'Tools' tab

  • Click the 'Check' button


If there are any errors found, Windows will try to repair them. You may be asked to restart your computer, depending on what drive it is due to access restrictions.



If that doesn't work or as an alternative to running CHKDSK, you can try compressing the file to a ZIP folder.




  • Right click the movie file

  • Go to 'Send to'

  • Click 'Compressed (zipped) folder'


Now you can try copying the ZIP-file containing the movie to another drive. If zipping the movie file fails, the file may be corrupted beyond the abilities Windows has to offer to repair it.






share|improve this answer
























  • chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:51











  • Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:55













  • @Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

    – David
    May 28 '17 at 21:07











  • In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

    – Luchador95
    May 28 '17 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 21:47
















0












0








0







Try running CHKDSK on the drive where the movie is located that you wish to copy. This will help identify any damaged sectors that may lead to read errors.
You can do that in the following way;




  • Open 'This PC'

  • Right-click on the drive where your movie is located

  • Click 'Properties'

  • Click the 'Tools' tab

  • Click the 'Check' button


If there are any errors found, Windows will try to repair them. You may be asked to restart your computer, depending on what drive it is due to access restrictions.



If that doesn't work or as an alternative to running CHKDSK, you can try compressing the file to a ZIP folder.




  • Right click the movie file

  • Go to 'Send to'

  • Click 'Compressed (zipped) folder'


Now you can try copying the ZIP-file containing the movie to another drive. If zipping the movie file fails, the file may be corrupted beyond the abilities Windows has to offer to repair it.






share|improve this answer













Try running CHKDSK on the drive where the movie is located that you wish to copy. This will help identify any damaged sectors that may lead to read errors.
You can do that in the following way;




  • Open 'This PC'

  • Right-click on the drive where your movie is located

  • Click 'Properties'

  • Click the 'Tools' tab

  • Click the 'Check' button


If there are any errors found, Windows will try to repair them. You may be asked to restart your computer, depending on what drive it is due to access restrictions.



If that doesn't work or as an alternative to running CHKDSK, you can try compressing the file to a ZIP folder.




  • Right click the movie file

  • Go to 'Send to'

  • Click 'Compressed (zipped) folder'


Now you can try copying the ZIP-file containing the movie to another drive. If zipping the movie file fails, the file may be corrupted beyond the abilities Windows has to offer to repair it.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered May 28 '17 at 20:17









Luchador95Luchador95

11




11













  • chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:51











  • Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:55













  • @Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

    – David
    May 28 '17 at 21:07











  • In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

    – Luchador95
    May 28 '17 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 21:47





















  • chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:51











  • Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 20:55













  • @Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

    – David
    May 28 '17 at 21:07











  • In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

    – Luchador95
    May 28 '17 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

    – Pali
    May 28 '17 at 21:47



















chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 20:51





chkdsk phase 4 (searching for corrupted clusters in user files) takes 42 hours ...

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 20:51













Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 20:55







Drive Read Error c00000b5 the drive has not enough space to replace corrupted clusters found in file FilmeDIETR~1DIETRI~2.MKV (1. the file has enough free space >50GB, 2. the file name is strange but I guess its an internal name and not the actual file name)

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 20:55















@Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

– David
May 28 '17 at 21:07





@Pali that's just an 8.3 file name, see: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename

– David
May 28 '17 at 21:07













In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

– Luchador95
May 28 '17 at 21:15





In this situation the free space refers to the amount of clusters available to replace the bad ones. Are there other important things on that drive? If so, I suggest backing up all important files just in case it gets worse. Consider replacing the drive as these errors are one of the first signs of a hard drive failure.

– Luchador95
May 28 '17 at 21:15




1




1





@Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 21:47







@Luchador95 I deleted ALL files expect the bad one (now there is 98% free space) but chkdsk still tells me that there is not enough space to replace the bad clusters, guess I can throw the HDD away?

– Pali
May 28 '17 at 21:47




















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