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+---
+title: "Zeroing out a drive on Windows"
+date: 2020-08-28T20:34:00
+tags: ["Guides", "Servers", "Snippets", "Software", "Windows"]
+---
+
+Recently I sold a couple more of the hard drives that made up my SnapRAID array back when I had a Linux powered home server. Wanting to check over the drives one last time for SMART info, and bad sectors I noticed I hadn't wiped the drive, and there were still readable files and partitions there.
+
+Previously, I did this all via a USB3 dock on my Linux laptop using `dd`, but today we're on a Windows desktop, so let the adventure commence!
+
+The command we want to run, in an elevated command prompt is:
+```
+format g: /fs:NTFS /p:1
+```
+In this example, we're formatting drive **G**. The `/p` parameter here is what's doing the zeroing, indicating the number of passes.
+
+Now to **fully** clean a drive, after the above you can wipe the partition table from the disk by running:
+```
+start > run > cmd
+diskpart
+list disk
+select disk 1
+clean
+```
+
+And you're done. \ No newline at end of file