Yes, a full format in Win7 or Vista will zero-fill the drive, which will put all the data beyond any hope of recovery. There's no real need for the /P switch, a single pass is enough.I've heard of a couple of programs that zero (nuke!) your drive but some users complained those programs rendered their drives unusable.
Would format x: /fs:NTFS /p:2 suffice when selling on your drives?
Yes, a full format in Win7 or Vista will zero-fill the drive, which will put all the data beyond any hope of recovery.
That was true for Windows XP and before - a full format would just check the drive for bad blocks without actually overwriting anything, so you'd need a third-party utility to make the data unrecoverable. However, Vista and 7 do perform a zero fill during a full format.I was under the impression that the reason it takes so long to do a regular format and not a 'quick' format is because it error checks the entire drive, and doesn't actually wipe anything.
I've heard of a couple of programs that zero (nuke!) your drive but some users complained those programs rendered their drives unusable.
I'm sure it's effective at what it does, but don't forget it will only overwrite the *free space* on a drive, leaving existing files intact.No idea how effective it is but I like to run "cipher /w"