20
4.4 hDD Wipe
The HDD WIPE option allows you to enable or disable HDD Wipe operation. When enabled, the
ERASE operation in the Main menu will change to WIPE (see section 3.2 Erase / Wipe on page 18).
The HDD Wipe operation ensures that data on the hard drive is completely erased and unrecoverable.
Unlike an Erase, which writes zeros to every sector on the hard drive, a Wipe Cycle is a four step
process that ensures that data is unrecoverable. The four steps are as follows:
1. All sectors on the hard drive(s) are written to with 0’s.
2. All sectors on the hard drive(s) are written to with 1’s.
3. All sectors on the hard drive(s) are written to with a random pattern of 0’s and 1’s.
4. All sectors on the hard drive(s) are verified
Press the
ENT
button to configure this setting.
•
[ ]
– Wipe disabled (default). Wipe functionality is turned off. In the Main menu you will see
ERASE.
•
[
٭
]
– Wipe enabled. The Wipe functionality is turned off and you will now see WIPE in the
Main menu instead of ERASE.
When you enable the HDD WIPE option, the system will ask you to configure the number of Wipe
Cycles. The Wipe operation can be run from 1 to 999 times consecutively. 7x Wipe Cycles complies
with the American DOD 5220-22.M standard.
[SETUP ]
>[007]WIPE CYCLES
Note:
The more Wipe Cycles you configure, the longer the overall Wipe process will take.
To configure the number of Wipe Cycles:
1. After enabling HDD Wipe The digit furthest to the left will be blinking, indicating that it
is selected. Press the
UP
or
Down
button to increase or decreased the value by one.
2. Press the
ENT
button to select the next digit to the right. Press the
UP
or
Down
button to
increase or deceased the value by one. Repeat this step as necessary.
3. Press the
ESC
button to confirm the number of Wipe Cycles and return to the Setup menu.
You can now access the WIPE function from the Main menu.
[WIPE ]x001
0 PASS 0 FAIL
Note:
Data on SSDs may not be permanently deleted by the Wipe function. Due to the differences
in technology between magnetic platters and flash based memory, sanitation techniques which are
known to permanently remove sensitive information from HDDs may not be as successful in removing
data from SSDs.
HDD Wipe