'Unplugging without mounting' may leave the filesystem in inconsistent state that only needs software to fix.
If you want to validate hardware via brute force try:
dd if=/dev/<your HD device> of=/dev/null
that will read the device track by track on its entirety.
If you want a deeper check (and can afford to erase the drive) try:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/<your HD device>
that will write binary zeroes all over the drive, what was years past a 'low level format' If you get exasperated, just shoot the damn thing and buy another one... :) The test that you are running may take a lifetime. Those are very through but they were designed when a 100 MB (yes, MB, *NOT* GB) was big. Now that the sizes are orders of magnitude bigger, the times are exponentially larger.
Grab a beer and forget about it...
ET

Michael writes:
I was wondering hpow many cycles does it run through? this stupid thing has
run almost 4 hours nnow an test 2 patterns! I'm going to bed! On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 1:36 AM, Michael <[email protected]> wrote:
Well.... I was having difficultie unmounting an auto-mounteddrive to run
badblocks but I figured that out..... anyways so far two passes have
completed withno errors. I was thinking that the reason it failed  was
because I had unplugged it w umount first/shouldn't it not fail ifI
accidently do that?

--
:-)~MIKE~(-:
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