My new 6TB HDD will take 40h to full format on a 2.0 case.. should I abort and do a quick format? (2024)

1

Just got a new 6TB Ironwolf Pro. I put it in a USB 2.0 case temporarily for some days (I'll install it as internal) and ran a low-level format without thinking much about it. Two hours later, it's 5%... so I estimate It'll reach 100% in 40h (all that time running at 53ºC/127ºF).

Questions: sould I abort, install it internally and run a quick format? Is it safe to abort? Will it take less to do a full low-level format if it's installed internally instead of the 2.0 case or it does not matter?

Thanks

asked Jan 23, 2019 at 18:54

My new 6TB HDD will take 40h to full format on a 2.0 case.. should I abort and do a quick format? (1)

Guille RoldánGuille Roldán

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2 Answers

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It is safe to abort and do a quick format.

Your biggest problem is USB 2.0 is approx 25mb/s so it will take a super long time to complete a full format.

For comparison, internal you usually get 100-150mb/s so it completes in approx 1/4 to 1/5 of the time.

answered Jan 23, 2019 at 18:58

My new 6TB HDD will take 40h to full format on a 2.0 case.. should I abort and do a quick format? (2)

cybernardcybernard

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  • I thought that was a HDD-job only, not related with the Pc it's connected to. That's why I did not mind the slow external case. Thanks!

    Jan 23, 2019 at 19:01

  • Tell it to abort and then wait for it to do so. Don't just pull the plug on it. These days a LLF is almost never needed especially with a new disk, and should only be used by someone who knows what they are doing. Install it in your machine, create partitions, and quick format.

    Larryc

    Jan 23, 2019 at 19:22

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If you're going to use it in your PC, I would just put it in there and do the format. You can choose to do a quick or full format.

Quick Format

  • A quick format on a volume removes files from the partition, but does not scan the disk for bad sectors.

Full Format

  • A quick format on a volume removes the files from the partition, and the hard disk is scanned for bad sectors. The scanning for bad sectors is what makes it take quite a bit longer.

What I suggest is doing a quick format. Then run the cmd command chkdsk /f. That will fix possible bad sectors. In my experience this is a more efficient way to setup a new disk. With it being a new drive, it's likely that there are no bad sectors.

answered Jan 23, 2019 at 19:10

My new 6TB HDD will take 40h to full format on a 2.0 case.. should I abort and do a quick format? (3)

DrZooDrZoo

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  • My understanding is that decades ago, a full format included sector checking, but no longer. That is all now handled by the hard drive's internal controller. Software like chkdsk can force a check. Otherwise, bad sectors are discovered during use via the error correcting code. A full format includes zero filling the partition, but not verifying the writes. See this earlier thread: superuser.com/questions/1142155/….

    Jan 24, 2019 at 2:35

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