I'm ressurrecting this topic just to all of you know that after being 4 to 5 hours helping... finally, XtremeKirby could have his HDD free of blad clusters...
Indeed yes. I just would like to say sorry to Tech for having to delay on telling everyone what we have done to get the HD free of bad clusters. Since I do have some time right now, I should get on to it:
As Tech said, bad clusters can be recovered on a HD by formatting and reformatting with different file systems and resizing the partitions between the format.
At first we tried the Linux Rescue CD and the Partition Magic clone included with it.
–>First, we deleted all the partions on the HD leaving it blank.
–>Then, we create a new partition and format with NTFS 4 to 5 times. We must format the HD more than once because that changes the partition geometry: positions, tracks, numbers, clusters, etc.
–>After that, we delete the partition, create a new one, resize the partion by at least 10% of the total HD space follow with more formatting with ext2 (Linux file system) and then delete, create, and resize by another 10% and continue formatting with ext3 (another Linux file system), and then do the same for FAT32.
We tried those steps with the Linux Rescue CD and then scanned the HD for bad clusters with a Cluster Verifying tool (I kind of forgot the name of it) in a boot floppy. At first it gave me a lot of bad clusters, so we tried again with a free version of Partition Magic (not the clone) that loads in two boot floppies. We did the same thing as above, and scanned the HD again with HDD Regenerator which lasted the whole night, for about 6 hours to scan my HD.
–>At last, when the scanning was done, it showed up as 0-bad clusters. Then later after I reinstalled my OS, I checked my HD with CHDSK using the >Scan and attempt recovery of bad clusters, and it showed up as 0-bad clusters too. We concluded that formatting with the Linux file systems, and resizing the partition helps cure the bad sectors in NTFS or FAT32 file system.
So, I hope these information can help anyone experiencing bad sectors or a possible HD failure. But, remember when doing this, make sure all data is backed up. Then, you can do whatever you want to the HD. Anything goes.
Big thanks to Tech for his wonderful help.