Clicking Hard Drive? Stop and Protect the Files First
A clicking hard drive is not just an annoying sound. It can mean the drive is struggling to position its read heads, failing to initialise, or repeatedly trying to read an area it can no longer handle. The safest move is usually to stop using it and protect the remaining chance of reading the data.
Do not run long scans, defragmentation, file repair tools, or repeated restart tests on a clicking drive. These actions may sound harmless, but they can make a physical fault worse because the drive has to keep moving and reading under stress.
Common situations we hear about
Some drives start clicking after a drop. Others begin after a power cut, a failing USB enclosure, or years of normal use. A desktop hard drive may click inside the computer while Windows freezes at startup. A portable drive may beep because it is not receiving stable power or because the mechanism cannot spin properly.
The sound pattern matters. A single click during startup is different from constant clicking and disconnecting. A short video with sound can help a technician understand what is happening before the device is powered again.
Data first, repair second
If the drive contains family photos, business files, study work, or accounting data, make that clear before any operating system repair is attempted. Recovering files and making the computer usable again are related but separate goals.
AEPC / AKL East PC can inspect failed drives and no-boot computers in Auckland. Outcomes depend on the physical condition of the drive and previous attempts. Contact us with the model, symptoms and photos, or visit 9/28 Torrens Road, Burswood, Auckland 2013.