
I'm not sure this happens with just the 'clean' command? what is the difference with this? As far as I could see, this would clean as well as overwrite with 1s and 0s (similar to the DoD 5220.22-M Wipe). The diskpart command is a new one to me I saw there was also the command 'clean all'. It will send whatever is on the drive on a one way trip to nowhere. Https /https /Be absolutely sure which drive you are accessing when you do this. If there is no specific tool from the manufacturer, then use the commandline tool in Windows. On this occasion, I want to completely wipe the SSD because I had a virus (well, Trojan) and want to be 100% sure it cannot be re-triggered or come back somehow.īut I'm also interested in learning about this because in the future it's likely I will sell/pass on my laptop and it would be great to know how to fully sanitise/wipe the SSD for this. (I'd like it to do at least a DoD 5220.22-M Wipe)Īlso, what method/software would you recommend for reformatting and repartitioning once the wipe above has been completed? What (free) software can you recommend for wiping/erasing and overwriting an SSD? what else could I use to fill up the SDD quickly and overwrite? Where could I find this? Otherwise, would you recommend the HDDErase tool or Parted Magic tool? I couldn't find the manufacturer's own secure erase tool/software.

Then delete partition, quick format, done. Https /If you have lots of movies on a hard drive that would fill up an SSD, fill it up w/ movies, which will overwrite all data on it. Here's an article on Parted Magic there are free older versions, but, it costs $9-$10 to download if you really need it.

Many manufacturers have a secure erase utility unique for their SSDs.ĭOD spec'd wipes really apply only to physical spinning platters, where they essentially waste time writing data to platters 3-8 times to prevent recovery based on residual cell 'memory', depending on spec.
