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Toward A Fake Flash Drive Free World – No More Counterfeits – No More Data Loss

H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives

Posted by KittyFireFlash on September 2, 2008

H2testw 1.4 has proven itself to be the best of breed for detecting counterfeit Flash drives. It is extremely easy to use and proves detailed information. Created by Harald Bögeholz, the interface is in German but has the option to run in English. It is free and standalone.

New!  This article contains a poll you can vote on.

Nothing is installed into the operating system. Designed for Windows it can run under Linux if Wine is installed. It will not run under Macs as it is a Windows Software . If your computer can not run the software – ask a colleague or friend who has a windows based computer to help you test.  However if you are a Linux or Mac user we have good news for you,  keep reading. A software has been developed based on the idea of H2testw,  just for you.

To learn more and for download information

Sections covered:

  • Gold Standard rating for H2testw 1.4 Why do you give this software such a high rating?
  • Results for a 64GB USB drive purchased on eBay, using H2testw 1.4
  • Results from H2testw have been verified on drives detected as fakes
  • Acknowledgements
  • Download Links
  • Note To Flash Drive Sellers

Gold Standard rating for H2testw 1.4? Why do you give this software such a high rating?

We give H2testw 1.4 the highest rating and recommend it for testing counterfeit USB Flash Drives for the following reasons:

  1. Easy to Use
  2. While in German an English Execution is possible
  3. Stand alone executable file – no installation required to run it
  4. You do not need administrator privileges on a computer to run it
  5. Tested to work on 1.1 and 2.0 USB drives
  6. Tested to work on 1.1 and 2.0 USB Ports
  7. Tested to work to analyze drives advertised as 4GB, 8GB, 16GB, 32GB and yes …64 GB capacity.
  8. Reports seen capacity – what the operating system sees size to be.
  9. Will write 1 GB files up to the reported size – requiring no work on your part except patience if it is a large drive and a slow computer
  10. Will read all the files it wrote and verify them
  11. Will produce a report. a) short if all is well b) detailed if there issues found.
  12. The program is offered free

The readme.txt file provides:

  • Explanation of the program and what it does for general computer users
  • Information on how to interpret the results
  • Technical information for those who have a deeper understanding of data storage and file writing and for the skeptics out there. Output results can easily be copy pasted into notepad to be saved as a text file.

Test results for a 64GB USB drive purchased on eBay, using H2testw 1.4

Sample Output For A Fake 64 GB Drive

The media is likely to be defective.
3.8 GByte OK (8084847 sectors)
58.6 GByte DATA LOST (122921617 sectors)
Details:710.5 KByte overwritten (1421 sectors)
7.6 MByte slightly changed (< 8 bit/sector, 15630 sectors)
58.6 byte corrupted (122904566 sectors)
710.5 KByte aliased memory (1421 sectors)
First error at offset: 0x000000003cef8470
Expected: 0xeb7ac43a237c5170
Found: 0xeb7a843a237c5170
H2testw version 1.3
Writing speed: 9.24 MByte/s
Reading speed: 10.8 MByte/s
H2testw v1.4

This is 4GB USB flash drive not a 64GB USB flash drive. It is of poor quality. As 4GB drive it should be about 3.9 GB not 3.8 GB formatted. This indicates in low level formatting a lot of bad sectors had to be locked out. Usually flash chips like these are rejected for major brands and should be destroyed. Unfortunately instead of the furnace flames these chips are leaving the back door of factories to be resold. These chips are a favorite for counterfeiters to reprogramme. Low cost, big profit.

The results from H2testw have been verified on drives detected as fakes. How?

  1. Drives were dissembled
  2. Controller chips identified
  3. Flash chip identified

Searches on the actual flash drives using their identification number revealed their true capacity. These matched the output from the H2testw Program.

In a few cases, when drives were disassembled, epoxy glue removed holding the flash drive to the bottom casing, quality control stickers were found with a size circled. The size? Exactly what H2testw reported as the capacity it could write to. All drives autopsied for investigation and validation of this program were purchased on eBay.

We do not see any other program that can match these features. Therefore, H2testw has been adopted as the Gold – Standard to detect and test fakes.

eBayers use this program to PROVE they have received a fake from a seller. It is confirmed with more eBayers reporting the same results for the same drive model. We have been able to prove this repeatedly, to the point we have only one conclusion. If a drive model fails capacity testing with H2testw then any for that listing on eBay is a fake. Having more eBayers test the same model only confirms what H2testw reported. The autopsies on counterfeit drives have also proven the value of this program. The report is a God send for eBayers who must file disputes. It gives them evidence to submit with their case.

Acknowledgements

To Herald Bögeholz who wrote the Program H2testw, Thank You!
To c’t Magazin für Computertechnik, Thank You!
To www.heise.de for hosting the download of the programme, Thank You!

People around the world who have suffered the misfortune to receive a Counterfeit Flash drive are grateful for your contribution in the struggle against False Capacity USB Flash Drives and memory cards.

Mac Users:

Linux Users:

Download links For Windows Users:

Using Google translation into English

Article Manipulated data loss caused by USB sticks – Heise Online

H2testw 1.4 Website – English

Note: Using translation can slow down access speed of the web pages.

German

H2testw 1.4 Website – German – Direct Site Access

You may prefer to search with Google for the software. Type in H2testw 1.4 which is the current version at the time of listing on this page. To search all versions you can just type in H2testw.

Direct Download Of Software For version 1.4 of H2testw

Note To Flash Drive Sellers

Please test your merchandise using this software. Do not offer for sale unless the drives are able to pass testing. You do not want to face the consequences of angry buyers. If you have drives which fail, contact the source you acquired from. Submit the proof you have as evidence for receiving counterfeit merchandise.

If the drives you offer for sale are able to pass the testing of H2testw 1.4 – congratulations!

Please indicate this in your advertising or listings. Let prospective buyers know that you have tested. That your drives pass with the program and that you are able to guarantee the true advertised capacity (minus a small overhead for operating system file formatting.). This will increase your sales potential.

If you find the tool H2testw 1.4 useful to you, please return and leave a comment on your experiences with it.

420 Responses to “H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives”

  1. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  2. […] hide the truth. If you are reading a warning about an eBay seller at this site, please test using H2testw 1.4. If testing fails for true capacity, […]

  3. […] hide the truth. If you are reading a warning about an eBay seller at this site, please test using H2testw 1.4. If testing fails for true capacity, […]

  4. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  5. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  6. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  7. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives . You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  8. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  9. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  10. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives . You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  11. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  12. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives . You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  13. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives . You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  14. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  15. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  16. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  17. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  18. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  19. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  20. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  21. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  22. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  23. […] of these eBay sellers you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  24. Shoeman said

    Aliexpress store. Alexa Manufaturer ltd. are the ones who sold me the fake micro sd cards. I will be getting my refund, but only once they receive the cards that i shipped back to them!

    My lesson learned, if the price is too good to be true, it is!!!!!

    I even tried another one from a friend who lives in Hong Kong and she bought it from a website for me who sells reputable stuff, and even came in a Kingston package with serial number and all. Checked it out on Kingston’s website with the serial number provided on the package, and got an e-mail back from web_report@kingston.com saying it was real. However testing it on H2Testw, it says it is most likely defective, as only 1.9Gbyte OK, and up to 19.8Gbyte corrupted so far…

    SO I don’t know what’s going on!!! Must be fake packaging that used a real ones serial number, but with a fake one inside???

  25. […] – fastpay38 you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  26. […] – dream_kat_69 you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  27. […] – isamushade you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  28. […] – layer97911hu you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  29. RockDoctor said

    SO I don’t know what’s going on!!! Must be fake packaging that used a real ones serial number, but with a fake one inside???Well, if you’re going to the effort of securing your faked chips, making casings that mimic the real thing, printing inserts that mimic the real thing, putting the whole lot together and setting up a lot of fronts to sell it … then the effort to go into a computer store that sells genuine goods and to photograph a genuine one to record it’s serial number … well, it’s not that big an effort, is it?
    You’d probably want to do it anyway, to make sure that your fake packaging looks convincing.
    It’s not as if you have to buy one of the sticks, is it?
    Just because the criminals who manufacture and sell these things are criminals, doesn’t mean to say that they’re stupid, or incompetent.

  30. RockDoctor said

    (That cited Shoeman’s message above, but it looks as if the “q cite” tag doesn’t work.)

  31. […] – sbonnay you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  32. […] classiccollection1 you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  33. […] – ash.seller123 you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  34. […] – caterkill you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  35. […] – davidc8792 you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  36. […] bdcglobalenterprise you are advised to test item(s) immediately for advertised capacity. Read: H2testw 1.4 – Gold Standard In Detecting USB Counterfeit Drives. You may have purchased a fake flash memory […]

  37. Monika said

    Beware of this scammer!
    Be careful when buying from ebay-member dreamknight725! I purchased a
    bracelet from this seller that neither matched the color nor the quality
    stated in the description. Despite an agreed return of the bracelet in Oct. 2009, I haven’t
    received my payment (USD 2700) yet.
    dreamknight725 also operates with the following ebay names: sick-deals
    king47st, elvi83, diamondtrends1, diamondstrends2 diamondtrends2 new diamondtrends2.
    His current nick names are: juliasdiamondsonline and halfpricediamondsny ( not longer ebay user ).
    I spotted the following report on ebay USA- it prooves me right : http://forums.ebay.com/db2/topic//520187488

    If you have any questions or if you’ve been cheated as well,
    then please feel free to contact
    me at: fc@ferenzo-como.de. I would be glad to hear from you.

    Monika

  38. Michael said

    @ Monika. What does a bracelet have to do with fake flash memory? I believe you have posted on the wrong website. Best of luck anyway.

  39. Jeff said

    Maybe it’s time to start a class action lawsuit against ebay to recover damages and costs caused by these fake memories,hit’em in the pocketbook that may stop them from allowing these fakes to be listed.I have been watching 3 of these 16GB SDHC cards in my ebay i’m going to remove them now.It’s true you get what you pay for.

  40. KittyFireFlash said

    @Jeff,

    Registered buyers with valid item numbers are entered into our database. Provided they make sure to give email addresses that are active, they will be contacted, if and when a class action suit transpires.

    Class action suits take time, sometimes several years. That is what eBay is counting on – they intent to permit the sale of fake memory to make money from listing fees. They are very desperate for revenue, they don’t care where they get it from.

    The most important actions are to:

    1) expose their participation in flash memory fraud on the internet. they can’t escape this. it is a permenent record. Good for a future class action suit.

    2) warn other buyers for a seller, so they can help to fight back by making disputes.

    3) preventing people from even considering buying any flash memory products on eBay. Hit them where it hurts – revenue.

    We need more people to make a noise, to protest. Use anything they have available to drag this issue to public attention. The internet is the best place. We recently announced the new features to use social media like facebook.

    The more people use a powerful social media like facebook to share our posts, the more eBay is implicated and damned for permitting the fraud to continue.

    Leverage FaceBOOK PEOPLE! Warn people you know. If you link to one of our articles, help those you know to avoid your mistake.

    You also empower SOSFakeFlash to work for you. And if I might say so… with minimum effort on your part!

  41. Brian said

    Can someone interpret these results. After buying 2 fake cards on EBay I figured I go to a reputable website and buy one. I got a 16GB WINETEC card from tigerdirect.com and these are the results:

    Error reading file ‘E:\6.h2w’, offset 0x25400000.
    (The request could not be performed because of an I/O device error. Code 1117)
    Warning: Only 15275 of 15276 MByte tested.
    The media is likely to be defective.
    5.5 GByte OK (11703760 sectors)
    1.2 MByte DATA LOST (2608 sectors)
    Details:0 KByte overwritten (0 sectors)
    0 KByte slightly changed (< 8 bit/sector, 0 sectors)
    1.2 MByte corrupted (2608 sectors)
    0 KByte aliased memory (0 sectors)
    First error at offset: 0x0000000000000000
    Expected: 0x0000000000000000
    Found: 0xffffffffffffffff
    H2testw version 1.3
    Writing speed: 4.52 MByte/s
    Reading speed: 9.43 MByte/s
    H2testw v1.4

    Did I get screwed again? What's with the error code?

  42. ITGuy said

    To Brian

    Your 16GB WINETEC drive could be a defective drive. The output from h2testw is not what is typical of a fake / hacked drive.

    5.5 GByte OK (11703760 sectors) – most fakes show an OK size of less than 4GB

    The only way to confirm that is it a fake is to open the drive and determine the size of the memory chips by visual inspection. I would not recommend this this as you not be able to get your money back from tiger direct if you did this.

    Try buying a brand name drive from newegg.

    The error code is “The request could not be performed because of an I/O device error” as per: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms681383(v=vs.85).aspx

  43. Tom said

    Just purchased a Kingston Micro SDHC 32GB card from Ebay seller
    viraldarshna and the card is a fake. The actual capacity is only 1GB. See test report below:

    Warning: Only 31841 of 31842 MByte tested.
    The media is likely to be defective.
    965 MByte OK (1976320 sectors)
    30.1 GByte DATA LOST (63234048 sectors)
    Details:0 KByte overwritten (0 sectors)
    0 KByte slightly changed (< 8 bit/sector, 0 sectors)
    30.1 GByte corrupted (63234048 sectors)
    0 KByte aliased memory (0 sectors)
    First error at offset: 0x000000003b5f0000
    Expected: 0x000000003b5f0000
    Found: 0x0000000000000000
    H2testw version 1.3
    Writing speed: 5.13 MByte/s
    Reading speed: 7.05 MByte/s
    H2testw v1.4

    Will be sending this report to Ebay and hoping to get a refund.

  44. salsero said

    bought a DT310 on ebay and the result is this:

    Error writing file ‘L:\7.h2w’, offset 0xe900000.
    It is still possible to verify the test data written up to this point.
    (The system cannot find the file specified. Code 2)
    Warning: Only 255808 of 255935 MByte tested.
    Writing speed: 5.47 MByte/s
    H2testw v1.4

  45. Shoeman said

    TO ALL CONCERNED!!!!!
    NEVER BUY ANYTHING FROM ALIEXPRESS.COM!!!!!
    MOST SELLERS SELL FAKE/COUNTERFEIT STUFF AND THE WEBSITE DOES NOTHING TO STOP THEM!!!
    REMEMBER…
    http://WWW.ALIEXPRESS.COM.
    WARN EVERYONE YOU KNOW!!!!!

  46. justcurious said

    I just wonder why don’t you simply claim you never received the item? In that case you will always get the full refund. Why to go through all that hassle trying to prove you got a fake or whatever? Just doesn’t make any sense..

  47. gabriel said

    I have a 32gb micro sd and i ran the program and it shows the following: can someone tell me how to fix it?

    Error writing file ‘F:\16.h2w’, offset 0x13500000.
    It is still possible to verify the test data written up to this point.
    (The semaphore timeout period has expired. Code 121)
    Warning: Only 29963 of 30988 MByte tested.
    Writing speed: 5.19 MByte/s
    H2testw v1.4

  48. Seth B said

    I have valuable footage potentially on my (possibly) counterfeit SDHC card. I don’t want to delete anything off the card until I’ve attempted to use data-recovery services. Will using this software erase all contents on the card?

  49. Seth B said

    Will using this software delete files that are currently on the SDHC card?

  50. @ Seth B,

    No it will not delete existing files. It will however, fill up the “reported space size” to the operating system. Then it will output results.

    Advice:

    1) copy existing files on memory card to your hard disk. Or some other media as insurance. A back up.
    2) run the software to fill up the reported size.

    H2testw writes files at about 1 GB to fill up the reported space. Then it will attempt to read those files and verify and produce a report.

    If you suspect your memory card, logic will tell you to first try and copy existing files to something else. A hard disk, a flash drive. Often when you try to copy files to another device, you will see the first signs of problems, if you have already exceeded the real capacity of the flash memory chip. Only files that exist in the “real size” will transfer. You will get errors for files that might be above the real capacity.

    Recap, Seth B.

    Copy files on your memory card to something else. Then test the files, can you open them? See them?

    When you have peace of mind about your existing files and know they are safe, do the H2testw on the balance of the the reported size.

    H2testw does not “delete” existing files. Only a user can delete files using their operating system afterwards. It just writes more files to fill up the flash chip.

    HOWEVER, some fakes go nuts when you exceed real capacity and can corrupt existing files. It depends on the algorithm used in creating the fake. This is frequently seen for usb pen sticks, especially Kingston fakes.

    So back up your existing files before you run the test Seth B, on your memory card. You asked a good question.

    Being paranoid is good. Thinking before clicking on a software tool is very good. You have the right approach. Try to transfer your existing files, verify them (you will learn a lot and have peace of mind), then run H2testw!

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