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Archived from groups: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell (More info?)
The hard disc on a friend's 2001 Dell recently failed. I went to have a
look at it earlier, and here's what I found:
- the disc spins up aggressively on power-on, and doesn't stop spinning.
- as long as the HD is plugged into the power supply and the IDE cable is
connected, neither his zip disc (on the same IDE-1 cable) or his optical
drives (on IDE-2) are detected by the system.
- when the HD is disconnected from the power, the system detects the optical
drives and they work just fine.
- when a new Seagate HD was installed in place of the failed unit, all four
IDE devices function perfectly.
I'm unsure why having the failed disc plugged in causes problems with the
other IDE devices. I'm very much an amateur, and whilst I've encountered
problem discs before, the cause has always basically been damage to the data
or boot sectors (and once a failed motherboard). This time is obviously
rather different because the hard disc isn't detected by or even identified
as being present by the system. Any ideas what exactly might be wrong with
the disc?
My friend has some data on the failed disc that he would really like to
recover. Is this likely to be possible without specialist equipment?
TIA,
Charles
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You, O Lord, keep my lamp burning; my God turns my darkness into light.
- Psalm 18:28
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
The hard disc on a friend's 2001 Dell recently failed. I went to have a
look at it earlier, and here's what I found:
- the disc spins up aggressively on power-on, and doesn't stop spinning.
- as long as the HD is plugged into the power supply and the IDE cable is
connected, neither his zip disc (on the same IDE-1 cable) or his optical
drives (on IDE-2) are detected by the system.
- when the HD is disconnected from the power, the system detects the optical
drives and they work just fine.
- when a new Seagate HD was installed in place of the failed unit, all four
IDE devices function perfectly.
I'm unsure why having the failed disc plugged in causes problems with the
other IDE devices. I'm very much an amateur, and whilst I've encountered
problem discs before, the cause has always basically been damage to the data
or boot sectors (and once a failed motherboard). This time is obviously
rather different because the hard disc isn't detected by or even identified
as being present by the system. Any ideas what exactly might be wrong with
the disc?
My friend has some data on the failed disc that he would really like to
recover. Is this likely to be possible without specialist equipment?
TIA,
Charles
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
You, O Lord, keep my lamp burning; my God turns my darkness into light.
- Psalm 18:28
-------------------------------------------------------------------------