- Joined
- Sep 20, 2019
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Processor | i9-9900K @ 5.1GHz (H2O Cooled) |
---|---|
Motherboard | Gigabyte Z390 Aorus Master |
Cooling | CPU = EK Velocity / GPU = EK Vector |
Memory | 32GB - G-Skill Trident Z RGB @ 3200MHz |
Video Card(s) | AMD RX 6900 XT (H2O Cooled) |
Storage | Samsung 860 EVO - 970 EVO - 870 QVO |
Display(s) | Samsung QN90A 50" 4K TV & LG 20" 1600x900 |
Case | Lian Li O11-D |
Audio Device(s) | Presonus Studio 192 |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime Ultra Titanium 850W |
Mouse | Logitech MX Anywhere 2S |
Keyboard | Matias RGB Backlit Keyboard |
Software | Windows 10 & macOS (Hackintosh) |
Hi all I've got a bit of a story to tell. I have been having one hell of a time lately dealing with corrupted file systems or system volume information for disks that I have been using in a SATAIII dock that connects to the PC via USB3. It really came to a head when I built a new SFF system for living room couch gaming and media consumption....I didn't want to specifically double up disks to store games or videos. So using docks made total sense! Just move the disks between the docks as needed.
After lots of trouble shooting I found a specific sequence of actions can (WILL) corrupt a disks file system. If I put disk A in slot A and disk B in slot B, power on the system, eventually I'll shut down the system, then put disk A in slot B and disk B in slot A.....upon next power up of the system disks are now messed up. It literally seems to assign the wrong system volume information to the wrong disk.....ie disk A is now labeled with disk B name and disk B is now labeled with disk A name. So it basically has no idea what files are actually there anymore and is corrupted
I've been able to corrupt disks like this using both Windows 10 and Windows 11 so I don't think it's just the operating system but one would have to think it's got something to do with how Windows handles internal type disks when connected via USB. This can also happen even when moving between different docks on different systems. That's how I first discovered it so I was surprised that any related complaint I found they never mentioned multiple systems.
Is this just some grossly overlooked flaw of using USB SATA docks that no manufacturer cared to take notice of or prevent? Or do you think the issue is with Windows and how it disconnects peripheral devices such as disk connected over a USB cable? Maybe something to do with how it enumerates disks that are connected to the same USB "mass storage device"? I would find it offensive to think this is the end users fault/error as there should be no requirement to plug the disk into the same exact slot after a subsequent power cycle. It would be different if this was mentioned somewhere, anywhere in any sort of documentation but I have yet to find anything that conveys it to a consumer or to anyone at that.
The docks I've been using....they are different brand and one is two slot and the other is four slot and problem can occur on both so it's not related to just a single defective unit
The disks are totally healthy. No errors of any kind reported in SMART type data. Only the file system or system volume info is getting corrupted. After a clean with diskpart and reformatting the disks are 100% useable again
After lots of trouble shooting I found a specific sequence of actions can (WILL) corrupt a disks file system. If I put disk A in slot A and disk B in slot B, power on the system, eventually I'll shut down the system, then put disk A in slot B and disk B in slot A.....upon next power up of the system disks are now messed up. It literally seems to assign the wrong system volume information to the wrong disk.....ie disk A is now labeled with disk B name and disk B is now labeled with disk A name. So it basically has no idea what files are actually there anymore and is corrupted
I've been able to corrupt disks like this using both Windows 10 and Windows 11 so I don't think it's just the operating system but one would have to think it's got something to do with how Windows handles internal type disks when connected via USB. This can also happen even when moving between different docks on different systems. That's how I first discovered it so I was surprised that any related complaint I found they never mentioned multiple systems.
Is this just some grossly overlooked flaw of using USB SATA docks that no manufacturer cared to take notice of or prevent? Or do you think the issue is with Windows and how it disconnects peripheral devices such as disk connected over a USB cable? Maybe something to do with how it enumerates disks that are connected to the same USB "mass storage device"? I would find it offensive to think this is the end users fault/error as there should be no requirement to plug the disk into the same exact slot after a subsequent power cycle. It would be different if this was mentioned somewhere, anywhere in any sort of documentation but I have yet to find anything that conveys it to a consumer or to anyone at that.
The docks I've been using....they are different brand and one is two slot and the other is four slot and problem can occur on both so it's not related to just a single defective unit
The disks are totally healthy. No errors of any kind reported in SMART type data. Only the file system or system volume info is getting corrupted. After a clean with diskpart and reformatting the disks are 100% useable again