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Essentially my 5G iPod was cutting tracks off and generally misbehaving. So I did the following:

1) Use Diskwarrior - heavy directory fragmentation which it fixed;

2) Use iDefrag - some fragmentation but it kept halting as it couldn't move files;

3) Try to write out drive with Disk Utility - got a warning from DU so gave up before I started;

4) Completely restored using iTunes;

5) Reran Diskwarrior - still heavy directory fragmentation;

6) Reran iDefrag, still fragmentation although limited to two bands;

The iPod is much quicker to traverse menus and no more track skipping.

My question is this - is defragging worth it or does the heat generated by the process kill the drive and make it a self-defeating process. Anyone have any metrics/ figures? Clearly it's a bad idea for solid state drives like the nano & touch.

2 Answers 2

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Doing a complete restore basically does the same thing as what you're trying to do with a defrag. It wipes the drive clean then writes all files back. Since all free space is consolidated, All the files' contents are contiguous.

Heat is bad for drives, but I don't think the heat would cause much harm, honestly.

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  • So you'd think - but according to iDefrag and Diskwarrior that wasn't the case.
    – alimack
    Feb 26, 2010 at 13:47
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I would say this is more a case of OCD(!), unless you have a serious problem with your iPod, refreshing is probably more sensible.

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