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From: InOverMyHead on 6 Aug 2006 02:05 What does this mean? Hard drive (Maxtor 80GB int.) is recognized on bootup POST but not by windows. Computer can't boot from it, and does not recognize it from a DOS floppy boot. Removed and installed as a slave in another machine: POST does properly identify it as before but windows (Explorer or Disk Mgr) does not see the drive. Using GetDataBack-NTFS, this program sees drives '0' and '1' and can attempt data recovery, but with tons of errors. So I know it is properly seated and spins up okay. Now - what are my options and which is recommended? Any help would be greatly appreciated. 1) Bad MBR - rebuild with ?? or 2) Bad MBR - impossible to rebuild lacking a saved copy which I don't have or 3) Forget fixing it - just attempt data recovery or Bob Background: eMachine had been working fine for 2+ years. No known physical trauma. Constant eTrust Antivirus protection. Have no OS installation disk, but do have the standard "Recovery" (Ghost) disk, but of course it is useless if computer can't see the drive. Also have made fdd set containing Recovery Console. Tech support is only semi helpful - to the point we're now dancing in circles.
From: CWatters on 6 Aug 2006 12:54 "InOverMyHead" <bbart(a)nospam.ix.netcom.comm> wrote in message news:jEfBg.5106$0e5.1119(a)newsread4.news.pas.earthlink.net... > 3) Forget fixing it - just attempt data recovery. Gets my vote every time. You can allways mess with it AFTER you have got the data off! I've had 4 drives fail in the past 4 years with no real common failure mode. How valuable is the data? If it's more valuable than the cost of a professional recovery service then you know what to do. If it's not particularly valuable then try recovering the data to another drive - either way I'd bin the drive. Just not worth the hassle of trying to fix. The clincher is... > can attempt data recovery, but with tons of errors. That's about as good as it gets. It's not uncommon for them to stop and never work again with no data recovered. I think my experience is typical... One of my drives started to fail with a high error rate, then while trying to get the data off it the head started to make a buzzing noise. Turned it off and tried again this time I got a different lot of data off but it started buzzing in a few mins. I repeated this process until I had 80% off the drive then it started buzzing as soon as it was turned on and no further data was recovered. The next drive that failed just started to make a screeching noise and the PC locked up. My wife called to tell me she had switched it off due to the noise it was making. No data was recovered (but I had backups so didn't need to) Next drive just stopped working. PC wouldn't boot. Tried hooking it up as a slave but couldn't explore the drive. It spun up and sounded ok. No data recovered (but I had backups so didn't need to). Recently a drive in an external USB enclosure started to cause problems - nightly backups to it failed because they didn't verify. Got progressivly worse over a few days. So 2 out of 4 probably would have resulted in a total loss of data had I not got other backups. Given the low price of hard drives it's not worth spending hours trying to repair one unless you need to to get the data off.
From: Rod Speed on 6 Aug 2006 14:32 CWatters <colin.watters(a)turnersNOSPAMoak.plus.net> wrote > I've had 4 drives fail in the past 4 years with no real common failure mode. Urk, time to stop that furious drunken grave dancing |-)
From: CWatters on 6 Aug 2006 15:07 "Rod Speed" <rod.speed.aaa(a)gmail.com> wrote in message news:4jmquiF8eikvU1(a)individual.net... > CWatters <colin.watters(a)turnersNOSPAMoak.plus.net> wrote > > > I've had 4 drives fail in the past 4 years with no real common failure mode. > > Urk, time to stop that furious drunken grave dancing |-) > > The told me grave dancing would excise the Norton Ghost that haunts my PC :-)
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