![]() The big benefit was that I didn’t lose half a day erasing and restoring disks and got back to work in half an hour instead of half a day. DiskWarrior succeeded after both others failed… Instead, I tried DiskWarrior, which repaired the disk damage after rebuilding and replacing the drive’s directories, all in around 30 minutes. Then, DiskWarrior Fixed It (Three Times)! ‘The Other Drobo’ is either not formatted or is a system owned drive that should not be used.” Note that both the Repair and Rebuild options are grayed out and unavailable.Īt this point, it seemed my only option was to erase (reformat) the recalcitrant disks. So I tried my next line of defense, Drive Genius… Drive Genius Failed, Tooĭrive Genius had a different alert I also don’t recall seeing before: Drive Genius can’t mount “The Other Drobo.”Ĭannot Mount Drive. Back up the disk and reformat it as soon as you can.” “macOS can’t repair the disk “The Other Drobo.”You can still open or copy files on the disk, but you can’t save changes to files on the disk. Disk Utility Failedįirst, Disk Utility displayed an alert I don’t remember ever seeing before: macOS can’t repair the disk “The Other Drobo.” Until recently, I’d have told you it was a three-way tie, with each of the three resolving roughly one-third of my disk issues over time. But, since the beginning of this year I’ve had three disk failures only one of these three apps could repair. ![]() ![]() That alone is reason enough to try it first. For another thing, who knows more about repairing your boot disk than Apple? And, for another ‘nother thing, it’s free (and you know how much I love free).īut when First Aid fails, as it sometimes does, I turn to a pair of third-party tools. When a disk fails or acts wonky-by not mounting when it should, or by disappearing from the desktop when it shouldn’t-the first thing I try is Disk Utility’s First Aid.įor one thing, it’s the only one of the three that doesn’t require you boot from a different disk to repair your startup disk (macOS High Sierra only). So, I also have more hard disk failures than most people.įor as long as I can remember I’ve relied upon the same three products when my hard (or solid state) disks go bad: Apple’s Disk Utility (free), Prosoft Engineering’s Drive Genius ($79), and Alsoft’s DiskWarrior ($119.99).
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