mudder1310 said:
What it does: wipe and defragment
No, it does NOT defragment. I have seen it wipe the drive several times on different 522s and the whole thing takes place in a matter of seconds. Defragmenting involves moving data around to put chunks of the same files back closer together. If you've ever defragmented a computer that had a hard drive that was quite fragmented, you know this is a loud, long task that isn't easily mistaken for anything else. When the 522 "cleans" the drive, there is ZERO hard drive thrashing. Even less than when you might delete a long movie or recording. The 522 pops up a message that says something to the effect of "Please wait while your drive is being cleaned," and then like less than 10 seconds later it reboots and everything is gone. This is part of what is so frustrating to me, that it doesn't even really delete or zero overwrite what was there, it's like it just erases the files from the index.
mudder1310 said:
What variable seems to set it off: The amount of stored shows. It seems to happen when the hd get near full.
How to avoid it: clear out your hd yourself
With all due respect (
), this is not accurate. I have never had less than 30 hours free space left (and usually it's much higher) and I have seen it happen five times on three different 522s over nearly the past year. No matter how tidy you keep your 522, when it arbitrarily decides to do it, it does.
maximum said:
Have you ever seen what happens to non-DVR receivers that get user preferences reset to default values? They probably lose these settings too but they won't lose locks to prevent people from using a reset function to bypass the locks. Maybe when the 522 does a HDD clean it also resets user preferences.
When the 522 wipes, it doesn't reset the preferences to defaults. Preferences are preserved but it erases the recordings, timers, and search strings. I'm with you on the locks, but again, why preserve the custom favorites lists and erase the timers? It's just completely illogical.
maximum said:
Maybe the 522 has less available memory than the other receivers and makes up for it by storing these other things on the HDD.
The 322 runs with 32 megs. I find it hard to imagine the 522 working with less than that. On the contrary, with the nine day guide, buffer and recorder management, Dish Pass timer system, etc. the 522 probably has double or quadruple the memory of the non-DVR receivers.
GetMeABeer said:
even if there were serious errors on a hard drive, there is NO reason to erase all that important data. No computer/OS in the world would do such a thing. If there are "errors" on the drive, the OS should be able to try and fix those errors, write movable data to other part of the disk, salvage something for you. To just erase everything shows how thoughtless and brain-dead the software designer was.
maximum said:
Or it could mean they were limited by time and/or hardware constraints when they designed it.
Like that's my problem. If it wasn't ready for the big time, it shouldn't have been released. And they've had well over a year to get their sh*t together with software updates, and the thing STILL has many of the same problems it had the day it came out.
maximum said:
Just playing devil's advocate here. I'm guessing they didn't design it to be a bullet proof system capable of elegant recoveries from bad sectors on the hard drive.
But if there really were bad sectors on the drive, why do they have no effect for (at least) 7 days? That's what I'm trying to say here, I don't believe this is an issue of there really being a problem on the drive. If there really were a problem, it would say your drive will be "cleaned" in 7 minutes, not 7 days. The fact that the receiver works fine for 7 days tells me there isn't really anything wrong with the drive. And even if there was, there's no reason the software can't tell the system to keep on working fine after the 7 day period until it really reaches a point of no return, and THEN erase the drive, not to just do it arbitrarily on the 7th day.
maximum said:
Since you already lost all of your recordings go ahead and get a replacement just in case your HDD is going bad. Don't wait until your drive is loaded with recordings and it wants to clean it again.
I agree with this idea, but he's going to get a refurbished receiver as replacement that might have a hard drive in worse shape than the one he's sending back.