Secure data wipe

Soldato
Joined
4 Mar 2003
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12,450
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Chatteris
I've got a stack of old HD's that I'd like to re-purpose. Can anybody recommend some tools to securely wipe these drives so that data retrieval would be "pretty nigh on impossible"?
I don't mind paying for the right tools - although would like to keep the budget as low as possible.

Thanks.
 
Man of Honour
Joined
15 Jan 2006
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32,390
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Tosche Station
I always reach for hiren's boot cd in these situations. It has a shed load of decent erase tools, so if you want to be sure you can use one for erase and fill with random, then erase with another and then repeat :p

:edit: I believe killdisk is one of the applications on it in fact!
 
Associate
Joined
2 Nov 2007
Posts
134
killdisk or dban. one pass of zeroes is enough.

One pass of zeros is like a full format in windows (in oppose to quick format). You do not need KillDisk for it.

Depending what you are trying to achieve but if your goal is to get rid of data without any option to bring it back to life 3 passes is absolute minimum and 7 is more like what you want :)

Cheers
 

KIA

KIA

Man of Honour
Joined
14 Nov 2004
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13,782
One pass of zeros is like a full format in windows (in oppose to quick format). You do not need KillDisk for it.

Bootable media. Full format will be fine if the OP is going to connect the drive to a working Windows system.

Depending what you are trying to achieve but if your goal is to get rid of data without any option to bring it back to life 3 passes is absolute minimum and 7 is more like what you want :)

Extraordinary claim without a source.
 
Don
Joined
19 May 2012
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17,149
Location
Spalding, Lincolnshire
One pass of zeros is like a full format in windows (in oppose to quick format). You do not need KillDisk for it.

Depending what you are trying to achieve but if your goal is to get rid of data without any option to bring it back to life 3 passes is absolute minimum and 7 is more like what you want :)

I know what you are saying - but even one pass of zeros is generally going to be secure enough for most people's home hard drives.

Whilst zeroed drives can be recovered e.g. by looking at the magnetic field strength to identify which bits have been recently overwritten etc, and so uncover the underlying data, generally it's only going to be worth going to the trouble if you know that there might be something worth recovering.
 
Associate
Joined
28 Nov 2012
Posts
668
I find old drives (6+ years old) not worth keeping as the capacities versus running them are just not worth it. Going to town on em with a hammer is the method I prefer for security purposes :)
 
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