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Secure Erase SSD

jalpert

New Member
I might be returning my surface pro due to a kickstand issue and I'd like to secure erase the SSD before I do.

I loaded up Partedmagic and tried to use the secure erase function to wipe the drive and it's frozen. Apparently the SP3 doesn't support sleep so it can't un-freeze the drive. The other way to unfreeze the drive is to not plug it in until the computer is booted, that obviously isn't happening.

Also, with the UEFI requirement, trying to get tools like DBAN or just about anything for that matter is a nightmare.

Not that you want to run DBAN on an SSD, but is there a tool that can access the SSD's firmware to do the drives built in wipe?
 

ctitanic

Well-Known Member
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OP
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jalpert

New Member
Does that option trigger the secure erase function of the SSD and then restore the partition, or does it just restore the partition?
 

Trinhsetta

New Member
What is wrong with your kick stand? I just got a Surface Pro 3 from best buy and my kick stand is very loose on one end. Wondering if I should go to Best Buy and get a replacement.

This is my kickstand.
 

leeshor

Well-Known Member
Someone else reported the same problem and got theirs replaced. Solved it with the replacement.
 

Bandito

Active Member
Trinhsetta,

That is definitely not normal for the hinge to be loose like that.

It normally has medium resistance until it gets to a certain number of degrees open, but is nowhere near loose enough to close by itself, which supports the screen in an easel-like position. Then it gets full (quite heavy) resistance for the remainder of its travel, which allows it to support the device in pretty much any position.

You should definitely exchange your Surface.
 

ctitanic

Well-Known Member
Does that option trigger the secure erase function of the SSD and then restore the partition, or does it just restore the partition?
I don't know what it does but once it does it all your files are gone for ever. Trust me.
 

graye

Member
Booting to an external device is not all that complicated.... just take two steps:
1) use the "volume up" boot technique to get to the secure boot setting
2) use the "volume down" boot technique to select the boot device

For example, I can boot my SP3 from Acronis Recovery Media (via a USB-flash drive or a USB-based CDROM), and then select the "DriveCleaner" option to wipe my SSD.
 

GreyFox7

Super Moderator
Staff member
I think this would do what you want using built in features of Windows/Bitlocker.

The SP3 drive is encrypted by default with AES 128 bit encryption
(with or without elephant diffusion not sure).
I don't know if the encryption keys get changed during reinstall, id like to think they do but...

After you do the Remove and Reinstall do one or more of these:
{whatever method you use will also be encrypted by Bitlocker as well}
run a program in windows to overwrite free space.
copy several large ISO files to overwrite free space.
Change the encryption level of the drive to 256 bit (the drive will get re-encrypted with new level).
Remove encryption then re-encrypt the drive with a different encryption level.
 

GreyFox7

Super Moderator
Staff member
All the Apple employees buying and returning SP3s don't want people to figure out what they are doing.. err Umm, I mean the NSA is really cracking down on document leakage so a secure erase is mandatory on all devices. {snicker}
 
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