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Pawel Krakowiak wrote: I think I have 1 more year to go.
that makes it more interesting, your warranty coverage will most likely result in your getting a new package and loosing whatever data was on the drive itself. The only possible exception would be if they did a diagnosis first and IDed a problem with the enclosure itself.
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I have some paper with a support ID which says the expiry date is 3/31/09 and on the box it says I have 3 years limited warranty. I still have to consult the supplier and the invoice I got when I bought it.
But I would really like to copy a few files and ideally wipe out the disk before I give it away for support, I'm kinda paranoid.
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Sector read errors are hardly just a corrupted NTFS issue. The drive is having problems reading the physical disk. The reason the drive goes to sleep is because there is no I/O activity going on. CHKDSK sent commands to the drive which either didn't get to the drive, or the drive didn't process and CHKDSK is still waiting. Therefore, since neither CHKDSK nor the drive is hearing what it needs to, the drive goes to sleep. Since CHKDSK very nearly keeps I/O going on the drive continuously, AFAICT, no, there is no way to turn this off on the drive.
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Another thing I noticed is that if I power up the drive in Windows, it starts spinning (at least the light circle indicator does) continuously and is inaccessible during that time. It takes at least a few minutes for it to 'calm down'.
I tried running HDD Regenerator, but since its a USB drive the program can't access it before Windows loads. HDD Regenerator uses some Windows 98 stuff, I am running Vista.
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You have no choice but to take the drive out of the enclosure and stick in the machine. If the drive won't access for minutes at a time, the drive is having problems with any of the following:
-Maintaining spindle speed
-Seek position
-BoT "heartbeat"
-Communication with the USB host (NOT the computer). This is the interface doing the translation between USB and the drive controller.
None of this stuff is going to be fixed by any piece of software you have, or can get...
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Thanks. It became inaccessible anyway. I just wanted to try to get a few files and perhaps wipe it out, but I guess I have no choice and have to hand it over to support. I do have the warranty yet. By the way - it passes SMART tests...
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Hi!
I have a project that requires a Win2k system to reboot without reinitialization of the parallel port. The post must initialize obviously but I don't want it to change the pin settings.
Currently, I'm using a hardware solution that is clumsy at best, using a gate, a latch and a debounce chip.
Does anyone have any circuit solutions? The simplest is of most interest.
Thanks
SpaceDoc
SpaceDoc
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My HD has ckt board damaged and may be motor is
also demaged is there any method to get data from HD plates
Can i put plates in another HD and get it?
Thanx
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If the new drive is identical to the firmware revision of the old one yes. If you do this, the drive is not fixed permanently. breaking the clean room seal will cause it to die in short order, so immediately copy all your data off after reassembly. If the data on the drive is worth spending several hundred to several thousand dollars to be professionally recovered, don't attempt this or any other DIY repair efforts. IF they fail you've probably destroyed the data beyond recovery.
Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots.
-- Robert Royall
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Good advise about going with having a professional data recovery service do the job. I sure wouldn't want to try.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer
"Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon
"Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham
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as with anything it comes down to what your data's worth. If it's only worth $50-100 a DIY platter transfer is your only real option. If it's worth $500+ you'd be an idiot to not send it to the pros. The in between cases are rather more interesting...
Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots.
-- Robert Royall
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The owner of myharddrivedied.com has a video of a presentation[^] where he explains swapping circuit boards. It's not something to try for the first time on a drive that you care about, though.
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SIr, i am planning to buy a new assembled PC with the following specifications:
1. Core2Duo E7200
2. IntelDG31PR (motherboard)
3. Zion 2*1 gb DDR2
4. Seagate 250 GB SATA2
5. Lite on DVD writer
6. Logitec KB+Optical Mouse Bundle
7. LG L194WT 19" Widescreen LCD
8. APC 500 VA
My doubt is about SMPS. How much power is needed for an SMPS for the above configuration. Please suggest me a few budget SMPS.
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Gjm wrote: My doubt is about SMPS. How much power is needed for an SMPS for the above configuration. Please suggest me a few budget SMPS.
If by SMPS you mean PSU or Power Supply Unit, then give the Antec Power Supply Calculator[^] a go. Fill in the page with what you know will be in the computer and it will tell you what the power consumption will be. Then take the next size PSU in wattage and your good to go. As for brand, whatever your pocket can afford, though Antec, Coolermaster, Thermaltake etc. have good reputations.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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Michael Martin wrote: As for brand, whatever your pocket can afford,
That's only true if you can afford a decent brand. Buying a $20 "600W" PSU that promptly smokes your hardware is not a good idea. Cut the rest of your system a bit if you're that tight on your budget.
http://www.jonnyguru.com/modules.php?name=NDReviews&op=Story&reid=71[^]
Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots.
-- Robert Royall
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"the computer is unable to establish two-way with the device"
What's happening? I have a HP DeskJet F2120. A google search turned up nothing for my printer.
Chuck Norris has the greatest Poker-Face of all time. He won the 1983 World Series of Poker, despite holding only a Joker, a Get out of Jail Free Monopoloy card, a 2 of clubs, 7 of spades and a green #4 card from the game UNO. In the movie "The Matrix", Chuck Norris is the Matrix. If you pay close attention in the green "falling code" scenes, you can make out the faint texture of his beard. Chuck Norris actually owns IBM. It was an extremely hostile takeover.
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That sounds like an error message I used to get with an old DeskJet using a parallel printer cable, if the port was configured as a 'standard' parallel port.
If somehow you're still using a parallel port, go into your computer's BIOS setup and change the printer port type to ECP or ECP+EPP. Or, try using a USB connection instead.
If you're already using USB then I have no ideas.
"Multithreading is just one damn thing after, before, or simultaneous with another." - Andrei Alexandrescu
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It's already USB.
Just a restart of the PC solved it though.
Chuck Norris has the greatest Poker-Face of all time. He won the 1983 World Series of Poker, despite holding only a Joker, a Get out of Jail Free Monopoloy card, a 2 of clubs, 7 of spades and a green #4 card from the game UNO. In the movie "The Matrix", Chuck Norris is the Matrix. If you pay close attention in the green "falling code" scenes, you can make out the faint texture of his beard. Chuck Norris actually owns IBM. It was an extremely hostile takeover.
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Hi,
I can't seem to connect to the internet and usb devices are not recognized by my system. I get a 769 error (network adapter problem) but however i reinstall using the drivers i still get the same error. device manager shows the following with a yellow icon beside the names:
1.wan miniport (ip) packet scheduler
2.wan miniport (network monitor) packet scheduler
3.wan miniport (PPTP) packet scheduler
Last software i installed was kaspersky internet security then i had to remove it again since it was in conflict with another antivirus. I have 2 lan cards...1 via motherboard. About the usb...pc camera is not recognized by the port after installation. Many thanks in advance for any and all responses
By the way I'm using WindowsXP prof ed
Aim small, miss small
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Hi all, I need to know the current status for SATA/PCI/PCIE.
For example:
If the chipset support SATA Gen2(3Gb/s) how can I know that the HDD is working on Gen1 or Gen2 mode?
The new PCI revision is PCI 3.0 how can I know that the PCI devices are working on PCI2.x or PCI 3.0 mode?
Now PCIE Gen2 is coming how can I know that the PCIE devices are working on PCIE Gen1 or Gen2 mode?
Thanks a lot for any help.
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Hi all,
I am a newbie to NDIS driver programming. I have written a very basic and simple NDIS protocol driver which just prints a message for all incoming packets. (I've taken help from DDK's Passthru and Protocol driver examples).
The part where I am stuck is that my Protocol driver is registered with NDIS as BindAdapter, UnbindAdapter and PnPEvent Handlers are all getting invoked/called and working as per requirement. However neither ProtocolReceive() nor ProtocolReceivePacket() is getting invoked, even in case of heavy network traffic ( which I confirmed with use of Wireshark).
Please Help.
Thanks in Advance,
Numero Uno.
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I should know this, but I just can't recall, or Google up an answer. I have a 120 Gb Western Digital IDE drive that only formats to 80 Gb. I used it for some time in that state, then swapped it out for a 500 Gb unit (which formats to full capacity) and noticed that it was actually a 120 Gb drive. No matter what I've done, it just refuses to format (under XP) to more than 80 Gb. What the heck is going on, and how to I reclaim the other 60 Gb of disk?
p.s. This is NTFS formatted.
QRZ? de WAØTTN
modified on Friday, August 15, 2008 8:23 PM
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What's the exact model name?
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: What's the exact model name?
It's a Maxtore DiamondMax Plus 9, 120 GB ATA/133 HDD, model 6Y120PO. I just downloaded the manual this morning (I've had this drive for a while) and it mentions the really old 528 Mb and 8.4 Gb BIOS limit, but of course this is a modern MoBo, and neither of these limits is anywhere around the 80 Gb limit I'm seeing.
I'll poke around on their Web site and see if I can find thier diagnostic/formatting disk download.
-- Dave
QRZ? de WAØTTN
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NetDave wrote: No matter what I've done, it just refuses to format (under XP) to more than 80 Gb. What the heck is going on, and how to I reclaim the other 60 Gb of disk?
Firttly I would have a look at the lable at the jumper settings. You may have a jumper set that limits the capacity, though I have only seen settings that limit to 32GB and not 80GB.
Secondly, if that isn't the problem I would look at the drive using a 3rd party application like Acronis Disk Director (my preference), Norton Partition Magic or a freeware version of the same. It may be that XP has an issue with the partition table and something else can get past it.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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