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#1
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Another sad dying hard disk story
Hello all,
My hard disk seems on the way out, it's making occasional scraping noises, punctuated by painful sound thuds. The strange thing is, this is the second time around with this computer (Dell Dimension). The last one lasted just one month less than the warrenty, and was replaced, now 18 months later the story seems to be repeating itself. My question is, could this have to do with the controller? 18 months seems a very short life for a hard disk, and a controller is cheaper to replace, is it worth it to try? This has been going on for 2 months now, and recently I've been recording audio on the computer, producing sometimes 3 gigs of 1megabyte files, which of course puts this household machine in to stress, but this surely couldn't be the cause? I'm still using win98, figuring that if it ain't broke, don't fix it, but now it seems I might have to revise my philosophy of life! thanks, Laurence, Amsterdam |
#2
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Laurence Hall and Tineke Hartgers wrote:
Hello all, My hard disk seems on the way out, it's making occasional scraping noises, punctuated by painful sound thuds. The strange thing is, this is the second time around with this computer (Dell Dimension). The last one lasted just one month less than the warrenty, and was replaced, now 18 months later the story seems to be repeating itself. My question is, could this have to do with the controller? 18 months seems a very short life for a hard disk, and a controller is cheaper to replace, is it worth it to try? This has been going on for 2 months now, and recently I've been recording audio on the computer, producing sometimes 3 gigs of 1megabyte files, which of course puts this household machine in to stress, but this surely couldn't be the cause? I'm still using win98, figuring that if it ain't broke, don't fix it, but now it seems I might have to revise my philosophy of life! Unlikely to be the controller, unlike some of the old floppy and hard drive interfaces the IDE controller has no direct control of the drive. It can't make the drive do something it wasn't designed to do. All of the physical operations of the drive are controlled by an internal controller built into the drive. Strange about the multiple failure. Sometimes a manufacturer has a bad run of drives (Fujitsu being a good example here, or the IBM Deskstar 75GXP) Dell probably did a like for like replacement so the problem drive was replaced by an identical (but working) one. I have heard of loose power connectors causing repeated drive failure. Inadequate cooling can also be a factor, but when we are talking about an unmodified branded machine you have to at least hope the cooling has been properly addressed. Personally I would go out and buy a (different) new hard drive and ghost over before your old one fails completely. |
#3
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On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 18:48:41 +0100, "Laurence Hall and
Tineke Hartgers" wrote: Hello all, My hard disk seems on the way out, it's making occasional scraping noises, punctuated by painful sound thuds. The strange thing is, this is the second time around with this computer (Dell Dimension). The last one lasted just one month less than the warrenty, and was replaced, now 18 months later the story seems to be repeating itself. My question is, could this have to do with the controller? Controller problems could prevent the IDE subsytem from working properly, that is, not being able to access the drive, but won't cause mechanical failure noises or access from another system... Odds of a controller failure are far lower than drive itself... Even power or data cable failures happen more often than the controller itself failing. 18 months seems a very short life for a hard disk, and a controller is cheaper to replace, is it worth it to try? IMO, no. Run the HDD manufacturer's diagnostics and see what that reports. This has been going on for 2 months now, and recently I've been recording audio on the computer, producing sometimes 3 gigs of 1megabyte files, which of course puts this household machine in to stress, but this surely couldn't be the cause? I'm still using win98, figuring that if it ain't broke, don't fix it, but now it seems I might have to revise my philosophy of life! The audio recording will be additional use, which might accelerate demise of a marginal drive but it shouldn't have cause such an early failure. You might check the drive temps, perhaps it's getting too hot. If you can't take a direct temp measurement then run the system for a while and then power off, imediately opening case and touch-testing HDD before it has a chance to cool. |
#4
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On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 04:13:19 GMT, XXXX
wrote: On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 20:52:16 GMT, kony wrote: IMO, no. Run the HDD manufacturer's diagnostics and see what that reports. This has been going on for 2 months now, and recently I've been recording audio on the computer, producing sometimes 3 gigs of 1megabyte files, which of course puts this household machine in to stress, but this surely couldn't be the cause? I'm still using win98, figuring that if it ain't broke, don't fix it, but now it seems I might have to revise my philosophy of life! The audio recording will be additional use, which might accelerate demise of a marginal drive but it shouldn't have cause such an early failure. You might check the drive temps, perhaps it's getting too hot. If you can't take a direct temp measurement then run the system for a while and then power off, imediately opening case and touch-testing HDD before it has a chance to cool. Yeah I never did that before check drive temps but after I did it with some progs, I was shocked to see some progs made the temps jump like crazy , some compression programs. And I put a Smart Drive monitoring program on that didnt work right with one of my machines and had the drive light on all the time after a while and the temps would jump like crazy. I took that off right away. I also had a recent problem similar to that. I put a copy of a Aquarium screen saver on and the hard light would stay on continiously and sometimes make my machine lock up after awhile. I took that off immediately too. Another thing I noticed was the corrosion/dirt/dust problem. I live in a tropical humid climate and all the machines around here ---- and I just went through another round of it, the contacts get bad. Ill get really bizarre behavior --- mem not registering properly, cards not recognized properly , hard drive corruption. I have to clean the contacts with some electronics cleaning stuff and then it works perfectly. Another thing is the flat ribbon cables 133. The really thin wires seem to go bad with constant plugging in and bending from shifting them out of the way in your case. Ive had recurring issues with them but today a friends computer - seemed like the HD was going out , totally erratic and finally cant read it and intermittent recognition. I move it to my second PC --- seems to work OK except that I cant format it after I formatted it with his PC with the erratic cable. Ive kind of blaming them and then thinking they were OK cause with replugging - probably rebending them they seem to work but now my older cables seem really wacko --- I can clearly see they are causing problems now. However after plugging my HD in and out on it after testing his --- my HD starts acting erratic and wacko. Finally no recognition of the HD ! I change out other old 133 cables I have laying around -- I get erratic results. I then went out and bought some new unbent ones. Those 133 cables get totally deformed with a zillion creases and bends in them cause the wire is stiff and super thin. I bought two round new cables and all the HDs are consistently coming out fine again along with a new flat cable I took out of a new HD box I bought last week. In fact my friends HD that I formatted when his cable seemed to be massively messing up, when I didnt suspect the cable ---- is now screwed up. With new cables I can consistenly read the HD , its stablel but WINDOWS and WD (its a western dig) cant do anything with it. They think its formatted in some werid format they cant deal with. Im looking for a low level format util for WD - Maxtor has one but I dont see it with WDs utils. I might try the old WIN98 partition etc utils too. Sounds like you desperately need a dehumidifier. |
#5
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"XXXX" wrote in message ... On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 04:30:09 GMT, kony wrote: Sounds like you desperately need a dehumidifier. I got an air con now in my bedroom so its not that much of a problem here anymore though the electricity bill took a huge leap. You do realize that an air conditioner will make your air DRYER, right? |
#6
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"XXXX" wrote in message ... Im looking for a low level format util for WD - Maxtor has one but I dont see it with WDs utils. I might try the old WIN98 partition etc utils too. Go to http://support.wdc.com/download/index.asp and check out the diagnostic utilities. Ray. |
#7
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On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 18:48:41 +0100, Laurence Hall and Tineke Hartgers
wrote: Hello all, My hard disk seems on the way out, it's making occasional scraping noises, punctuated by painful sound thuds. The strange thing is, this is the second time around with this computer (Dell Dimension). The last one lasted just one month less than the warrenty, and was replaced, now 18 months later the story seems to be repeating itself. My question is, could this have to do with the controller? 18 months seems a very short life for a hard disk, and a controller is cheaper to replace, is it worth it to try? This has been going on for 2 months now, and recently I've been recording audio on the computer, producing sometimes 3 gigs of 1megabyte files, which of course puts this household machine in to stress, but this surely couldn't be the cause? I'm still using win98, figuring that if it ain't broke, don't fix it, but now it seems I might have to revise my philosophy of life! thanks, Laurence, Amsterdam What brand of drive? Maxtor's have the life expectancy of a May Fly. IBM had a couple of bad drives, the 75GXPs and the 60GXPs, don't know if the current Hitachi drives (IBM sold their drive division to Hitachi) are reliable or not. Seagate are reliable and I've had relatively little trouble with Western Digital. The one thing in your system that could kill a drive is bad cooling although I doubt that this is a problem in a Dell. The controller is definitely not responsible, there is nothing that it could do to cause a mechanical failure. If I were you I'd get a new Seagate drive and put it in your system before the old one dies completely. Copy all of your data to the Seagate so you don't lose it. |
#8
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"General Schvantzkoph" wrote in message news What brand of drive? Maxtor's have the life expectancy of a May Fly. IBM had a couple of bad drives, the 75GXPs and the 60GXPs, don't know if the current Hitachi drives (IBM sold their drive division to Hitachi) are reliable or not. Seagate are reliable and I've had relatively little trouble with Western Digital. I have had over a dozen Maxtor drives, ranging from 200MB (my first PC) to currently two 80GB drives, a 20GB drive and a 15GB drive. They have thus far lasted the lifetime of the PC (3 years or more), except one 10GB drive that died after 2 years. I have had one Seagate and one WD, and each lasted less than a year. |
#9
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On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 12:01:54 GMT, John
wrote: On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 07:50:39 GMT, "Noozer" wrote: "XXXX" wrote in message . .. On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 04:30:09 GMT, kony wrote: Sounds like you desperately need a dehumidifier. I got an air con now in my bedroom so its not that much of a problem here anymore though the electricity bill took a huge leap. You do realize that an air conditioner will make your air DRYER, right? Yeah thats what I want. You look at everything and its rusting , corroding like crazy. Thats the problem not static electricity. Though thats always a concern. I was shocked when I looked at some screwdriver bits - has a removable bit, that I bought a few weeks ago. I picked it up and there was rust on the bits. If I leave my car and house with the air con on and Im wearing glasses they can actually get so fogged up I cant see. Make sure your AC isn't oversized, if it cycles on and off too often it won't remove as much moisture, and will also cost more to run. Was it you that was wondering previously about the best way to ventilate it out of a room? What did you end up doing if so? |
#10
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On Mon, 1 Nov 2004 12:35:57 -0500, "James H. Fox"
wrote: "General Schvantzkoph" wrote in message news What brand of drive? Maxtor's have the life expectancy of a May Fly. IBM had a couple of bad drives, the 75GXPs and the 60GXPs, don't know if the current Hitachi drives (IBM sold their drive division to Hitachi) are reliable or not. Seagate are reliable and I've had relatively little trouble with Western Digital. I have had over a dozen Maxtor drives, ranging from 200MB (my first PC) to currently two 80GB drives, a 20GB drive and a 15GB drive. They have thus far lasted the lifetime of the PC (3 years or more), except one 10GB drive that died after 2 years. I have had one Seagate and one WD, and each lasted less than a year. Yep it's a lottery, Maxtor's failure rate is nowhere near as high as General Schvantzkoph implies. I too have about a dozen Maxtors and only had problems with their old Diamondmax 60 series, which is about 4 years old at this point. |
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