We based one of our most popular pop quiz
challenges on a situation every tech support person has faced or
will face at least once: a failed hard drive. In that
particular case, a Compaq Prolinea 4/66 user was getting errors
like "disk 0 error" and "invalid drive
specification." Here were the other facts in the case:
·
The data wasn't backed up.
·
The problem came out of nowhere.
·
The user had accessed Setup and tried to manually enter the
settings for the drive type when "Auto" didn't work.
·
There was no startup disk made by this machine.
Reviving a drive like that one—even if
only long enough to copy its data before you throw the drive in
the garbage—is a tough challenge. When I asked TechRepublic
members how they would troubleshoot a situation like this one, we
received over 200 solutions, and we heard from a number of
TechRepublic members who wanted to know “what everybody else
suggested.” So we decided to publish this collection of over
200 ways to revive a hard drive.
In editing this document, we tried as much as possible to preserve the voices of the TechRepublic members who submitted these solutions. Of course, as the legal blurb at the end of the document declares, we can't promise that any of these tips will work in every setting. But we thought you'd enjoy reading what your fellow IT professionals had to say on this subject. Enjoy!
Freeze
it...................................................................................
2
Drop
it......................................................................................
9
Hit
it.......................................................................................
10
The
rest of the solutions......................................................
14
From: Travis Standen
One trick I have learned as a technician,
when the problem is data-read errors off the platters themselves,
is to freeze the hard drive overnight. It makes the data
more 'readable,' but for a one-shot deal. If this data is
critical, and you have a replacement hard drive (which, if it's a
drive failure, you probably do), then you can hook up your frozen
hard drive and immediately fetch the data off before it warms up.
From: Thedeedj
If the problem is heat related, I put the
drive in the freezer for about 15 minutes to cool it down...
sometimes this gets the drive up long enough to copy any critical
files...
From: Itguy1
Put the drive in a waterproof sealed bag,
put it in the fridge for an hour or so, then have another go.
From: Kelly Reid
Well, I won't start playing with your
specific situation, too many steps or possible solutions where
everything starts "If that last thing didn't work try..."
But I'll give you one for free that was a
nice hero moment for me. Had a drive where it sounded like the
drive motor was engaging but not getting anywhere, so we stuck it
in the office freezer for an hour! I'll be darned if it
didn't work. The drive was up long enough to get the data ghosted
to another drive and we turfed it, even though it sounded fine at
that point. I can't really take credit for it though—I had
heard it in some geek bull session but I thought it was some jedi-geek
urban myth. Goes to show you that you know you're really screwed
when you say something to the effect of "Okay, hold on
tight, I'm gonna try something I saw in a cartoon once but I'm
pretty sure I can do it"
From: mpicpu
If this drive isn't spinning up, putting
it in the freezer for about an hour will usually get the
drive spinning again so you can copy needed files before the
drive warms up again. The first thing you want to do is run a
disk utility like Norton disk doctor or wddiag (if it's a western
digital drive) to verify whether the drive is working
mechanically or not. If it is a master boot record problem,
sometimes running Fdisk/mbr will correct the problem. It could
also be a virus, and a program like F-prot will look at the drive
as a physical unit. As an A+ PC technician I have seen this
problem many times. Usually if the drive is not making a clicking
sound I am successful in recovering the data.
From: Scott Greving
I've run into this scenario numerous
times. One time it involved the main Novell SYS volume on our HP
File Server. I was really sweating as the server would not boot.
I took the drive out and put it in a freezer for 30
minutes. I then reinstalled it into the file server and Presto! I
was up and running. Needless to say I quickly mirrored the drive
onto another and got rid of the bad drive.
In stand alone client systems, the method
I've had the most luck with reviving drives from death has been
removing the drive, firmly tapping the top of its case several
times, and then re-installing it making sure all cables are
secure. I've had a better than 60 percent success rate with this
method.
From: jphillips
If the drive is spinning and you are
experiencing these kinds of errors, my experience has been that
you are out of luck.
If the drive is not spinning, I have been
able to remove it from the computer and 'spin' the drive on a
flat smooth surface (much like spin the bottle). This will
usually free the drive and when placed back in the machine, it
will boot. You should immediately back up you data after a
successful boot, because the problem will return.
The next 'fix' was actually given to me
by a Compaq technician several years ago. I had a drive that
would not spin and he told me to put the drive in a plastic bag
in the freezer overnight and then install back in the
computer. Believe it or not, the drive booted. I have only tried
this the one time.
From: John Turcotte
In the past, when a drive has failed
after it has been running for a short period, I have removed it
from the machine and placed it in a freezer for a couple
of hours, then hooked it up again. It sometimes will run long
enough to remove the data to another safe storage medium.
From: David Furlow
One of the methods I have used before (sometimes
even successfully) is to actually remove the drive from the PC,
place it in the freezer for a day, then quickly put it
back in the machine and try to access it. Why does this work? Who
knows, but I heard about this tactic years ago, and it has saved
my behind on a couple of occasions. (Of course, if it comes back
up, back up the data immediately.... Guess that should go without
saying.)
From: Keri D.
Hard drive revival:
A technique I have learned is if you
bring the temperature of the hard drive down to the freezing
point by putting it in a freezer first and then taking it
back out, somehow the condensation from bringing it back to room
temperature helps revive it for about 20 minutes. It can be
repeated about 5-6 times tops. Long enough to get out any
important files that need to be backed up. It has been proven to
work a number of times.
From: Christopher Post
How do you bring a hard drive back to
life?
My situation:
Half of a volume set goes south on a
WinNT server, no good backup and an angry boss screaming about
the data being mission critical.
My solution:
** A bit unorthodox but, it has saved my
butt! **
· Turn off the server.
· Take out the failing hard drive and wrap a static bag around it.
· Throw it in the freezer conveniently located in the break room.
· Pray for 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
· Leaving the hard drive in the bag, quickly plug the drive back into the server. (Just plug the in cables and go.)
· Cross fingers, turn it on, and move all data off the drive as fast as you can! Then add a tape drive and start backing the dumb thing up!
My so-called logic:
Metal contracts when it is cold.... so
the platters shrink and increase the clearance for the read/write
heads.
From: Chris Poole
Put the drive in the freezer for
about a week and then you can usually get one last read off the
drive.
From: Cheyenne Robert Alspach
Here are some drive recovery tricks that
have worked for me, in the order that I do them. Try booting the
drive and copying the data off after every step.
1. Hold the drive upside down, making
gravity change the head geometry ever so slightly. Vertical is
also another option.
2. Slightly rap the drive with your
knuckle, (but nowhere near hard enough to damage the drive).
3. Try the drive in another machine, (slight
drive voltage change assumed to be the miracle worker here).
4. Rap the drive just SLIGHTLY harder
than you did above in 2.
5. Freeze the hard drive in the
freezer for two hours, and place in a plastic zip lock bag to
prevent condensation from forming on the drive when you plug it
back into the system, (head geometry, electrical resistance
lowered, electrical contact points adjusted, etc., assumed to be
the miracle here).
6. After the drive warms up to room
temperature or better, rap it even harder with your knuckle this
time.
7. Repeat all of above steps on next day,
as sometimes I've gotten data off drive simply by trying again.
From: James McLaughlin
Hmmm sounds like a toughy to me. Back in
the old days when I first started teching, if we ran into a
problem like this, there were only a few ways to deal with it. I
will go over these options now:
QUESTION: What do you think you can do
about this, Mr. Tech?
First Answe—r—Nothing, your
computer is too old, and the data on there is not really of that
much importance. If you really want it back, you can get a hold
of a company called "Total Recall" out of Denver and
get charged thousands of dollars to get your files back. Besides,
with Y2K, this machine ain’t gonna run anyway, and prices
are so low right now, there is no reason why you should not
upgrade now.
2) Well, I can take it back to the shop
and pretend like I know what I am doing for 3-6 hours. Then I
will call you the for the next week and a half giving you excuses
as to why I am not able to get your information off of that hard
drive. Of course, I won’t charge you anything, but I will
expect compensation for all the time I wasted on your hard drive.
3) I could take the hard drive out of
your machine, plug into my Secondary IDE controller, and
boot up. Hopefully, I can see your hard drive and have the
ability to copy all of your files to a temp folder on my machine
called "Your Name." After I collect all information, I
would run IBM's WIPE on the drive and then a thorough scandisk,
just to see if the cause was sunspot related or not. If......this
was not working, then extreme temperatures always have a way of
talking older hard drives into giving us what we want. I would
then wrap the HD in a Ziplock bag and slam it in the freezer
for 12 hours. Pull it out the next day and very quickly plug it
into my machine, copying what I can as quickly as possible until
the drive dies again, repeating until all files are copied and
safe. If.....that don’t work, move onto the extreme heat. A
Shrink wrap gun works best, but a hairdryer will do the trick if
that is all you have. Wrap one end of the HD in a towel and use
the shrink wrap gun or dryer to heat the hard drive. Very quickly
plug it in and copy files until finished. Repeat until all
necessary files are copied and you are done.
You may not think it works, but when you
are down to that as your last option...it does.
From: Lichtenwalner Allen L TSgt
Solution:
· Carefully remove it from the computer.
· Place it in the freezer for 24 hours, then put it back in the computer. You should have approximately 30 minutes of good spin time left before a fina–l—and much more permanen–t—shut down.
This problem often arises from a catastrophic hard disk crash—bearings are usually the culprit, coupled with badly worn read/write heads. I've used this technique on many computers throughout the last fifteen years as "resident expert" and saved virtually all important data.
If you're in a pinch for time, such as critical data needed for a briefing in twenty minutes, you can opt for the more drastic cooling technique—a C02 fire extinguisher...
From: Jeff Smoley
Here is a solution for really dead drives:
ones that won't spin or ones that make those funny grinding
noises:
Put the drive in the fridge for a few
hours. This can shrink up something inside that might let it run
long enough to get critical data. If not, try the freezer
for a few more.
This actually has worked for me in the
past.
From: Neal Menkus
Things we have done in the past that
worked:
1. Remove the drive, grab it, and shake
the hell out of it: "What could it hurt? It's not working
anyway…."
2. Place the drive in a freezer
for about 10 minutes.
3. Open the drive case in a laminar flow-hood,
and give it a spin. (Once it was closed up and reinstalled,
it worked long enough to suck the data off of it.)
4. Swap the logic board with one on
another drive of the same type.
Numbers 1, 2, and 3 worked with older
Seagate (which we no longer purchase) drives, which were prone to
"stiction" problems. Number 4 worked following an
electrical surge (lightning strike), since the data on the
platters were still there and OK.
From: Clifford Liles
Depending on the drive failure I have had
success with some rather extreme solutions to data recovery.
Symptom: Invalid Drive Specifications
Treatment:
Basic
Check your cmos battery
Check your IDE cable and connections
Check your jumper settings
Remove all other IDE
connections but the drive in question
Advanced Try
disk manager software
Try data recovery software
Use a bios upgrade card ($39) and allow it to setup the drive
Look up the drive specifications on the manufacturer’s Web
site and plug
them in manually.
Turn Off or On Write Precomp—32bit disk access
Symptom: Drive does not spin up: "Sticktion"
Treatment:
Basics
Lightly tap the side of the drive case with a screwdrive–r—no
power
Lightly tap the side of the drive case with a screwdriver–—power
on
Advanced Cold
soak the drive: Freeze
in a zip-lock bag
Spray drive case with inverted can of canned air
Lightly slap the drive on a desk top: (mild frustration)
Repeated hammering of the drive on a desk top: (last
resort—total
frustration only)
Symptom: Invalid media type
Treatment:
Basics
Boot with a FAT32 Windows 95 boot disk
Sys the drive
Advanced fdisk
/mbr
Check for a virus from a known clean boot disk
These are but a few techniques for the
doomed platters. These techniques can be used in conjunction with
one another to arrive at the desired solution. Lather, rinse, and
repeat if necessary.
From: Daniel Philpott
Here is the solutions checklist for this
problem:
Tools needed:
· Bootable CD or locked floppy dis–k—Formatted with an OS that can see the file system of the hard drive. DOS is usually the preferred OS for this function with NTFSDOS from Sysinternals for NTFS reads and DOS utilities for diagnostics/repair.
· It should have the ability to boot to and/or see CD-ROM drives, read FAT, FAT32, NTFS, or other common file systems, run common network card drivers and see the network, have disk diagnostic and/or repair utilities, and have antivirus scanning software with current definitions.
· OnTrack Data Adviso–r—A free download from www.OnTrack.com Hard Drive (large capacity)—Formatted for a FAT file system (or whatever is your common file system) and preferably with BeOS as the boot operating system.
· Computer Repair Tool Ki–t—Standard repair tools.
· Freezer–—The one in your kitchen will do quite nicely.
1. The first task to recovering a drive
is not at all technical—It is social. Prepare your user for
the worst but also explain what the realistic chances of recovery
are. Then start collecting information that you will need. Here
is what you need to know before starting:
· What is the goal of recovery, returning to the previous state or recovering the data?
· Which is most important?
· What is the client willing to spend on recovery?
· What OS (NT, 95, Linux) and DOS (FAT, NTFS, FAT32) was the system running?
· Where is the computer located?
2. Check the environment: The last
question from step 1 is often forgotten and can lead to extensive
troubleshooting of a simple problem. Look for an environmental
problem that may cause problems for the hard drive. Are there
magnets on the computer case close to the hard drive? Is there a
fan or heater near the computer? Is a transformer, electrical
junction box, or high energy device near the computer (on a floor
above or in a nearby wall)? All of these will produce a magnetic
(or electromagnetic) field that can cause problems. Equipment
that may vibrate the computer even at a very low frequency can
cause hard drive heads to skip and jump or even scratch the
platters.
3. Turn off the computer, remove the
cover, and get ready to the turn the computer on. Then put your
ear right next to the drive and power the system on. If you hear
any kind of grinding, scratching, or rattling from the drive,
turn the computer off as quickly as possible and go to the next
step. Otherwise go on to step 5.
4. If the disk has made noise that
indicates some sort of mechanical stress, then the problem is the
domain of data recovery experts. This is where the client has to
make a decision. Do they want to send the drive to a data
recovery service, or do they want to destroy the disk in an
attempt to recover some data? If the client has information that
absolutely needs to be recovered, then send it to the
professionals. Remember, you cannot service a hard drive unless
you are working in a clean room.
If they are willing to destroy the disk
and try to get some data off the drive, there is a quick hack
available. Place the drive in a static-free bag, then place the
drive and static-free bag into a ziplock bag to seal out moisture.
Place this into a freezer turned to as low as possible for
24 hours. After 24 hours, pull the drive out and immediately put
it into a computer (the faster the better) that boots to a floppy
and has another hard drive to transfer data to. If the drive
wasn't damaged too much previously, you should be able to pull
some data off before the metal of the drive heats up and starts
destroying the data storage platters. You can repeat the process
only if you shut down almost immediately and go through the 24
hour freeze process again. Chances are that the first time
attempt will be the only chance to recover data.
5. If the drive boots to an operating
system and you can get to either a network or backup medium, then
start copying the most important data off first. Once that data
is off, you can back up less important data. The best bet is to
listen to your client to find out what absolutely must be
recovered.
6. If the client wants to restore the
drive to its previous state and continue operating, then you need
to do two things to see if this is feasible.
· First, run a virus scan on the drive. Update the virus definitions then scan every file on the computer.
· Second, boot to a floppy-disk-based hard drive utility and run a low-level
bad sector discovery utility.
If both tests pass and the computer boots
to the operating system, then your job is done and you are
eligible for a pat on the back. Otherwise, continue.
7. If the drive does not boot, then try
booting to a bootable CD or a bootable locked floppy disk. If you
can see the file system, continue to step 8.
If you can not see the file system, then
assess your tools. If you have Hard Drive Mechanic from Higher
Ground Diagnostics or Tiramisu from OnTrack, then you can use
these to diagnose and recover data. Otherwise, boot to the Data
Advisor disk to find out whether data can be recovered. They will
recover it or suggest a recovery plan or even require the disk be
sent to a data recovery center like OnTrack. The client needs to
make the choice as to whether the expense of this solution is
worth the recovery of the data.
8. If you can see the file system, then
priority actions are:
· Copy the most important data off the drive
· Copy the rest of the data off the drive
· Determine if the drive can be recovered (scan with virus checker and disk utilities)
· Repair the operating system
The best way of doing this is to install
your spare hard drive in the computer and boot to either it or
the CD/floppy bootable. Copy the important data off first, copy
the less important data off next, and then do your diagnostics.
If your diagnostics look like the drive is repairable, then go
right ahead and repair it.
The reason I suggest BeOS be the boot OS
on the hard drive is that it has the ability to mount more file
systems than I even knew existed before using it. If you need to
access an exotic file system, BeOS 4.5 is almost sure to have a
driver available for it. However, the FAT (or FAT16) is the most
commonly readable file system around, so generally you will want
to transfer data to this file system.
If it becomes apparent that the file
system is intact and not infected with a virus (or has had a boot
sector virus removed), then you may need to replace the Master
Boot Record (MBR) of the drive. Simple. Boot to a DOS disk that
has the fdisk utility and run an 'fdisk /MBR' to replace the MBR.
Remember, balance the time it takes to restore the operating
system against the time it takes to recover data, get a new
drive, and install a fresh operating system.
Normally, disk recovery is simply a
matter of recovering the data. Returning a drive to its previous
state is a goal but may simply be more costly than recovering the
data and replacing the drive. How much effort to expend on the
process is entirely up to you and the client.
From: Bob Matott
Besides the typical use of sys C: to
transfer back the system files deleted during "housecleaning"
by typical users, I've gotten lucky by turning the drive upside
down and setting it on top of the power supply (which seemed to
remove "a static charge" that had built up).
Also have used various Disk Manager
packages to "talk" to drives with FAT/NTFS corruptions
just to recover the data. If drives are being reformatted from an
operating system that doesn't want to "fully go away" (can
name a few!), the disk manager software has also worked in this
scenario many times to get rid of the old and allow you to
reformat with the new.
Of course, there's always the "drop
it from 4-5" onto a flat hard surface" or "smack
the side of the case with the flat of your hand"
approaches. Believe it or not, both techniques have worked. Rumor
has it that sometimes the heads "stick" to the platters
during parking/cooldown.
From: Kenneth Lillemo
Sometimes a hard drive that has been
running since nearly forever won't spin up after being shutdown
for a while. This can be caused by the heads sticking to the
platter. As a LAST resort, I will drop the drive onto a firm
surface from approximately eight inches. Inevitably, this
will solve the problem and the drive is useable long enough to
remove the data. My Sys admin spouse gives me a funny look every
time I do it but can't argue with the results.
From: Peter Tello
If the low level diagnostics fail, I
declare it officially dead. At that point, I have nothing to
lose, so I pull it out and over a thin carpet, drop it 6"
squarely on all 4 sides, repeating this 2 or 3 times. I have
approximately a 50 percent successful boot-up rate, usually
enough to copy the data off and save my behind for not having it
backed up in the first place.
From: TDC Tech
This is a one-time fix—long enough
to revive HD to get data.
· Take the HD out of the computer and squarely drop it on the closed side of the drive (to your bench) with perhaps a little slam.
· This seems to free up the bearings long enough to copy data off of the hard drive. I have quite a bit of luck, but 90 percent of the time it only works once.
From: Karen_Roman
1. Check CMOS settings to make sure the
drive setting are what they should be—the CMOS battery could
be dead or the user may have changed the settings. A bad hard
drive could cause the Autodetect to misread settings.
2. Boot from a floppy disk and run fdisk/mbr
to restore the backup copy of the master boot record.
3. Image the drive with drive copy
program to a new drive.
4. It’s possible the HDD controller
is bad. Try the drive in another machine.
5. Boot from a floppy attach to a network
drive or have a secondary drive installed and if you can access
the data copy it off to there.
6. The drive could have a stiction
problem. Tap it gently on the sides, preferably with a rubber
mallet.
From: Alan Gates
As "unscientific" as this
sounds, I have found that rapping the drive case a couple of
times sometimes allows the drive to come up. I have had several
experiences in the past like this. Sometimes the drive is having
trouble "spinning up." Obviously, the drive is on its
last legs but a rap on the drive case will sometimes free it to
spin up. This will allow the system to boot so the data can be
backed up before the drive goes into the trash...
From: Bob Barker
I have found on more than a few occasions
that older disks can develop a sticking problem. I believe it is
a combination of weak motor and surface-to-surface tension
between the disk and heads. This problem usually shows up on
older disks that have been running a few years (usually 24 hours
a day) and then shut down for service or other reasons.
· When you try to start up again, the disk will not spin and you get disk errors trying to boot. After checking for the usual problems (power, cables, jumpers, etc.) and finding that the drive was in fact not spinning, I have had great success jarring the disk with my palm (of my hand, not my PDA). I some times have to be a little more violent to get it to start but I have never had to use a hammer.
· I would be careful using this method if the data on the disk must be recovered at any cost which I would then send to On-Track or some other expensive data recovery company.
· I have found this problem mostly with older servers, but a few weeks ago I ran into the same thing on a two-year-old Compaq IDE drive that was only used a few hours a day.
From: Randy Forston
If the hard drive isn't making noise and
when you place your hand on it (not on the PC Board side, but on
the metal casing), you don't feel any vibration from the drive,
you may have a sticking problem (some older drives with a variety
of drive lube no longer used have this problem).
If the above describes the symptoms
you're seeing, try rapping around the drive case with the plastic
handle of a screwdriver.
This will quite often remedy the stiction
and allow the drive to come back up as normal.
From: philn
Hi there,
A few things can be performed on a
crashed drive before declaring it DEAD:
1. Touch the drive (or listen to it) to
feel whether it's spinning. Some drives gradually suffer from
spin-up problem but otherwise work fine once spinning. If it
doesn't spin at power up, gently knock on the side the drive
once or twice to jump start it. This works best if you knock
on the drive approx. one or two seconds after power is applied.
Repeat the procedure a few times and add a little more force if
necessary. Remember that too much force can permanently damage
the drive, but again, you have nothing too lose at this point.
2. If drive spins normally and stays
spinning, try listening for irregular sounds emitting from the
drive. A series of 'clicking' sound usually signifies multiple
bad sectors including the boot sector that can prevent drive from
booting. If drive 'Auto Detect' is enabled, make sure that its
signature is shown at boot screen. If not, drive is certainly
suffered from major hardware failure.
3. Check system's CPU to make sure it's
not overheating (CPU can run warm, but should not be hot) due to
a failed cooling fan, etc. Overheating the CPU can cause the
system to be unbootable or cause the system to reboot itself
frequently.
4. You could use another system to test
the problematic drive to make sure that the controller is not at
fault. Try both "Auto" and "User Type" (where
you manually enter the drive's parameters) settings.
5. Try booting with a floppy and run
'fdisk' to view drive information. Some drives suddenly lost all
of their data possibly due to corrupted FAT, but otherwise,
continue to work fine once initialized and formatted. In many
cases, FAT can be restored by executing Norton Utilities from
floppy.
If all failed and data from drive must be
retrieved, you can try swapping its hardware (drive's main board)
with similar working drive. Though this procedure can void drive
warranty, but your data is more important, right? Or else, you
try services that can save your data from dead drive for a fee.
From: Lyle Giese
Put CMOS back to auto for HD and see if
it sees an HD at all. Put in a bootable floppy—can you see
the HD? (Don't forget to write protect the floppy in case this
was a virus.) Now try EZ-Drive. Some versions (I have several on
hand with different advanced options) show what parameters the
hard drive is set to in CMOS and what parameters the drive was
formatted with. The second set is important. Sometimes the BIOS
doesn't auto correctly.
Listen to the HD. If it powers up
normally by sound (no strong thumping sound) and the platters
seem to spin up, you still have a chance. If the drive spins up
and then down or if it emits a strong thumping sound, the hard
drive is toast and only a professional recovery company with a
clean room can help.
If the HD doesn't spin up at all, occasionally
you can gently slam it down to get stuck platters unstuck and it
will spin up long enough to back up your data. The HD is
toast physically at this point, and it needs to be replaced
before trying the slam technique. There were also a few older HDs
that had the flywheel exposed, and you could nudge it slightly
and they would spin up long enough to back up the data. Again these
are last resort techniques and you ARE planning on replacing
the HD anyway.
From here, one of several software
products are available to assist you as long as the drive spins
up physically to assist the technician. Most of these products
can read drives with damaged FAT tables or missing sectors.
And it could be just a simple matter of
losing the Active attribute for the partition! Also, viruses can
cause this by blasting the partition table, and some of the
professional revival products can assist from here.
Good luck!
From: Christopher Tolmie
· If the drive is not spinning up on power-on, I'll lightly rap on the side of the drive enclosure with the handle of a screwdriver while listening for the platters to begin to spool-up.
· If it doesn’t spin up, I'll increase the pressure of each rap until it does start spinning. I've gone to the extreme of picking up an externally mounted full height 5.25" disk drive and slamming it continuously on the desk while it was starting up.
· I did this for over six months until the drive finally died completely, but I did extend its life and it never had corrupt data on it. Of course, it was all backed up. If the drive won't spin, then you aren't going to recover the data.
· You can you a third-party utility like RESCUE that reads the drive directly using its own operating system and saving individual files and directories to another drive. I've recovered entire drives this wayI—it is time consuming but it works. When all else fails, send it to the professionals.
· Search the Web to find different companies that specialize in rebuilding the drive, but expect to spend mucho dinero.
From: Craig Shipaila
Before you do the following, make sure
that the controller is not the problem or a cable on backwards,
etc., by taking the drive out of the computer and putting into
another one to see if it’s the computer causing the problem.
If the other items have been checked, then do (what we call) the
slam test.
If the drive is dead the only thing you
can really do is:
1. Find out if the person needs any
important info that you might be able to get off of computer.
1a. If person has data they cannot live
without and the drive is not running, take the drive out of the
computer and slam it down to the desktop to get the motor
running. Nine out of 10 times, this will get the motor
running long enough to get data. If needed you can also send the
drive into a White Room to have them get the info.
From: Joseph Bruno
Actually, the solution isn't mine. We had
several Dell PCs and the C drive went out on one (with no current
backup, of course). The Dell tech came out with a new drive but
the warranty didn't include data recovery for which they wanted a
$5,000 deposit and offered no guarantees.
I asked the tech if there was anything we
could do on our own to get the drive to spin up so we could get a
backup. "Well", he replied, "there is one thing
I've done that sometimes unsticks the drive." He then
took the drive out and slammed it flat down on the desk as hard
as he could. After putting it back in the drive, it spun up.
I was advised to back up the data before shutting down the system
as "the slam" doesn't always work and seldom works a
second time.
Fortunately, once was enough in this case.
The data was backed up to a portable tape drive and the C drive
was replaced and restored.
From: Sam Espana
I have used several ways to solve the
same issue. The reason is the fact that a hard drive is a hard
drive is a hard drive, or is it? The answer is NO. If a hard
drive is failing it’s usually because it is legacy equipment
that often doesn't even support LBA mode. But, sometimes it isn't
even the hard drive that’s causing the problem. Say what?
That's right.
By in large, I first approach this
situation by asking the user how much hard drive space he/she
used to have. Usually the answer is over 512 megabytes. But,
again, you'll be surprised.
Secondly, I ask the user if this is the
first time this situation has occurred and whether or not he/she
knows if we are dealing with a new or old computer.
Armed with the above answers. I usually
solve this problem by performing a combination of the tasks
described below.
1) Test the motherboard BIOS/CMOS battery.
Often, the hard drive is just fine. But, the internal battery is
dead. Some computers like a few Packard Bells I have dealt with
have LBA and 32-bit mode turned off by default. Those settings
may have been enabled during assembly, but now that the battery
is dead they are set back to factory settings (when the user
turns his/her computer off) rendering the hard drive inaccessible.
Solution: Change the internal battery and enable CMOS LBA/32-bit
mode.
2) Ask if the computer has been moved
recently. Often, when computers are moved, data cables are
detached from hard drives and/or motherboards. Obviously, without
a data or power cable, a hard drive will never work. Solution:
Reattach cables and be prepare to actually replace them.
3) Worst case scenario. It is the hard
drive that does not seem to respond. Then, replace the hard drive
with a new Master drive and install the faulty drive as a Slave
drive. Make sure you install the same Operating System used by
the Slave on the Master. Then, proceed to probe the Slave drive.
Ideally, at this point you should use diagnostics tools such as
Micro-Scope from Micro2000. If you have experience, you should
not close the computer box making sure that the Slave drive is
within reach. Twice, I have been able to restart a hard drive
after gently banging on it (once as Slave and once as a
Master.) Don't miss the boat. Even if you happen to restart the
faulty Slave drive, you must copy your info to the Master so that
you are not placed in the same situation again because the next
time you may not be as lucky. The above procedure works whether
the drive is an IDE or SCSI drive. However, when using SCSI hard
drive, you may have to test the SCSI card as well. I am leaving
now to fix a drive that belongs to a RAID pack because it seems
to be out of the scope of this drive quiz.
From: Earle Pearce
When a drive is really gone—cannot
be read at all—due to a physical failure, I employ a trick
that has yet to fail me.
1. Install the replacement as an
additional drive.
2. Remove the bad drive and smite it
firmly on both edges (bang it on something solid)!
3. Reinstall it, reboot, and it will work
long enough to get the data copied to the replacement drive.
4. I haven't had the opportunity to check
this step yet but I think it should work. If it's the boot drive
that's bad, mirror the boot partition to the replacement drive,
then break the mirror, remove the bad drive rejumper, and boot to
the new one.
From: Scott Wittell, MCP A+
I had to laugh when I saw this easy fix,
and it does work. We were able to bring back a failed drive in an
older HP server running NetWare 4.11. First step is to remove the
drive from the machine. Second, hold the drive flat in your palms.
Third, shake the drive a few times in an up-and-down motion, like
you're trying to hammer a nail. Don't let the drive hit the floor
though. I've used this technique on numerous occasions, works
every time.
From: Colle Davis
The Hair Dryer Method
For the last resort (when the drive
really did die, it-is-not-even-spinning type crashes), there is a
possible solution that comes from the early days of hard drives.
Back then you were not supposed to turn them off—I don't
know why but IBM said never turn them off unless you are standing
there.
One of our main computers was housed in a
closet where I could not hear it well and had a power supply
failure that apparently took days to complete. I happened to open
the closet for some other reason and discovered a warm box and
immediately went through the shut down sequence to take it off
line for a new power source.
Several days later, the unit was shut
down again for a long weekend of downtime on a routine
maintenance schedule and upon restarting the system the hard
drive would not work. I am pretty good at backing up everything
but could not find the backup disk anywhere. Panic. I am the
author of a newsletter that goes to hundreds of subscribers
everyday, and the mailing list was on the dead drive. I replaced
the drive and reloaded everything but was going through sobbing
spells as I looked for solutions to recover the lost data. Data
recovery companies wanted over five thousand dollars to try to
recover the data.
A client of mine told me he once
possessed an old 286 that required a hair dryer to get it running
every time he turned it on. The fellow who had built it for him
was an IBM technician and gave him the hair dryer idea because
that is what IBM used to do to restart the drives in down
machines. So on the bench machine with the drive out where the
dryer could get to it and still be hooked up, I began the process.
Lo and behold, it worked. While it was running, I downloaded all
the missing data and immediately uploaded it to the new drive.
Don't laugh, I got my outcome and can now say I recovered a fully
dead hard drive with my wife's hair dryer.
From: John B.
As for me, I have had good success with
this method (about 50-50).
I take the drive, and suspend it 4"
over a plastic carpet tool (one of those things you see in an
office to help the chair wheels go). I then let it "fall"
while still holding it, twice on each long edge, then once flat
on top and bottom. You want firm, but not too hard raps on the
plastic. I find that the carpet underneath seems to cushion the
blow just enough. This appears to work on drives with stuck read-write
heads most of the time. If the center bearing is locked up,
nothing short of a miracle will bring it back. In any case, have
a second drive ready to receive your files when you attempt to
restart.
From: Tony
A. Dead system—System "A"
B. Known working system—System
"B"
C. I am assuming that the system board is
posting and responding in the correct manner. And that no Jumpers
have been moved on any of the equipment.
Step 1. Verify power to Hard Drive (HD),
Multi-tester (VDC), or another system plug. If power (See step #2)
If no power, swap/replace plugs/power supply.
Step 2. Swap hard drive from A to B and
boot. If boot, then HD is good. (See step #3) If No-boot, then
replace HD.
Step 3. REMOVE...DISABLE if onboard....
all un-needed devices from System A...modem, sound card...etc.
NOTE: Label HD ribbon cables A and B
before removal from systems. "A" for System "A"
and "B" for System "B")
Step 4. Remove from system A and B the
HD, and ribbon cable that connects it to the motherboard...(MB)
Step 5. Swap drive and cables from B to A
and connect to MB. If boot then controller on MB "A" is
good (See step #6.) If No-boot then MB controller is bad....
replace MB.
Step 6. Return HD's and cables to
original systems, Remove HD ribbon cables from both systems, swap
B for A and boot...If boot then ribbon cable on A is bad...replace.
If No-boot then... Balance your check book, and get out the sale
pages...you've got bigger problems!!
From: Eddie N.
The two techniques that I have used to
get a failed hard drive to come back to life is to Sys the drive
from a boot disk and/or to use the fdisk/mbr command form a boot
disk. I have used these together and independent of each other.
From: Paul W.
Dead disk drives?
There's a bunch of steps I would take if
the drive weren’t being recognized by either the auto setup
or manual entry.
1) Check your Master/Slave/Standalone
jumper settings and make sure they are correct and don't conflict
with another device on the same IDE channel.
2) Check for bent pins on the connectors.
3) Try a known good cable—Floppy and
IDE cables often seem to go down the gurgler at the worst
possible time for some unknown reason.
4) Try a known good drive on your IDE
channel and check the channel. If it doesn't respond:
· Try another IDE port (if there's two)
· Disable onboard IDE and try another I/O card (one that’s known to be good of course)
5) Try the disk in another PC.
6) Here's where it starts getting tricky.
By now you must be reasonably convinced you have a bad case of
galloping disk rot. On some drives (not all), if you have an
identical same model drive, you can swap over the logic board.
This will let you know if it is the embedded controller on the
logic board. With luck, your disk will roar into life and you can
suck the data off onto somewhere safe.
7) If your disk is making a hideous noise
like a peg-legged man with a vacuum cleaner on a wooden floor (whirrr,
clunk, whirrr, clunk....), then it is likely you have a dropped
head. This is where you have start making decisions about how
much your data is worth, because to go any further is going to
cost big time and may require factory technicians to try and
repair the disk in a clean-room environment. If your data was
that important, then it would have been backed up. (Of course it
would have been, they all respond in loud voices)
8) She's dead, Jim. How fast can you
type?
In a nutshell, this is my summary of the
death cycle of a hard disk.
From: Daniel F.
Get an identical Hard Drive and swap out
the Logic Unit (Electronic Board). Set your CMOS to auto-detect.
You’re good to go!!!
From: Miles H.
·
Check cables are on and are the correct way round.
·
Check jumpers to ensure the disk has the correct setting (depending
on otherisks or CD-ROM used on the same controller, if any).
·
Check Bios setting for Model of PC is current. Download latest
version if necessary.
·
Boot from DOS floppy, use FDISK to check if disk can be seen. If
the disk is there, then I would suggest using GHOST or similar to
copy the image from disk to disk.
·
If the disk was not apparently running, I would swap the disk out
and install it into a PC that was working.
·
The options here would be to have the 'faulty' disk as the master
or slave depending on your situation.
·
If installed and works as master, ghost the image to the network.
·
If installed as slave, boot the PC and use ghost to copy from
disk to disk or to Network.
·
If disk was still in a state of absolute failure, I would suggest
contacting the disk manufacturer to ask their advice.
·
They may have some low-level disk checking/repairing software.
·
I would also install a new disk into the original PC with O/S on
and ask the user to ensure all data is put onto the network (if
possible).
·
If all else fails, then you'd have to chalk it up as experience
and hopefully someone would learn to ensure sufficient backup
procedure were implemented.
·
Therefore, the next time this happened it would not matter. You
would be able to reinstall the O/S and Applications (manually or
automate) and restore data back to the user (if held locally).
From: Lawrence Shipinski
Easy, go to Maxtor's Web site or Seagate
Web site and download the utility software. It's free. Please
back up whatever you can first!
From: Jake G.
Well, I'm kind of new to this, but I'll
throw my hat in the ring.
First, I would try flashing the CMOS. If
the battery is built into the system board (I bet it is), then
find the CMOS jumper, pull it–—or move it from pins 1-2
to 2-3—then kick the power on for a few seconds. Power down;
put the CMOS jumper where it started. If the battery is
removable, then pull the battery and flash the CMOS.
Try rebooting.
If that doesn't work, put the Quick
Restore disks in, reboot, and exit to DOS when you get the chance
(I don't remember the exact steps to that). Now, depending on how
this QR was put together, you may have to change to a virtual
–drive—possibly N: and then the TOOLS directory. You
may be able to do this straight from the A: or C: prompt. Run the
command FDISK /MBR and reboot.
If it still doesn't work,then I would
have to check into a disk utility you can run from a bootable
floppy (assuming you can even get that far). Don't have a whole
bunch of experience with those. The next step after that is to
just swallow hard and kiss that data bye-bye. You could replace
the hard drive but why keep a relic like that around when you
could buy another one five times as good for the same money the
Prolenia cost you when it was new?
From: Gordon G., IT Manager
The following is the normal procedure
used at my company (before sending the hard drive to a data
recovery agency).
1. Return the BIOS to the original state.
If "auto" for hard drive then "auto,”
otherwise to "user defined" with LBA enabled for
Microsoft's operating systems.
2. If the system still doesn't boot off
the hard drive, then boot off a write-protected bootable floppy
using the same operating system and version as what is on the C:
drive.
3. If there is no hardware error during
the boot process, see if the c: drive can be accessed at all. If
it can be accessed and files and directories can be viewed, now
is a good time to back up files if the physical condition of the
hard drive is suspect.
4. Check the hard drive with an antivirus
program. Sometimes computer viruses damage the boot sector. A
good antivirus program will identify the problem and may even
correct the situation.
5. If there is no virus found on the c:
drive, then run "sys c:" to restore the boot files to
the hard drive. Only run the sys command if you are sure the BIOS
settings are the same for the hard drive as before the problem
was reported. One way to check this is to look at the file and
directory structure of the drive. If you see garbage, then the
settings are probably not the same (or the FAT was corrupted).
Reboot the system after running sys.
6. If the drive boots, you're almost done.
If not, then reboot off the diskette and scan the drive for
errors. Reinstall the operating system without formatting the
drive.
7. If the drive makes any unusual sounds
or doesn't spin, then your best option is to send the drive to a
data recovery agency. Attempting to recover data from a
physically damaged disk usually results in further damage to the
drive and little chance of recovering any data later. The best
question to ask here is "What is your time and data worth?"
8. In step 6, I said that if the drive
boots you're almost done. What's left? Make that recovery
diskette, make a backup of the drive and thoroughly scan the hard
drive for any physical errors. Perform the scan last, since the
drive may fail during a scan if there are any physical problems
with the drive mechanism.
From: Traci N Thrash
I hope you have good luck on your data
recovery. Usually, the first thing I do is to pray, then scold
the user GENTLY for not making backups. I hope they never ask to
see MY backups.
1. Pull the disk. Put it in a known
working machine. This gets you out of the malfunctioning
environment and into a controlled space, YOUR workbench.
2. Try "Auto config" to set the
drive type.
3. If "Auto config" does not
find the correct drive type, you have two options:
· Read the actual specs off the drive label (this may or may not work, depending upon whether the set-up tech used them or not).
· Use a disk utility to read the specs off of the drive.
4. If this does not work, is the drive
spinning?
· If not, try to "shock" it by setting it flat upon the table top, applying power, and rapping it on the side a couple of times with a plastic-faced hammer or handle of a screwdriver. Don't be afraid to rap it pretty good, these little guys are pretty sturdy nowadays, and worst case...you already have a broken drive! (Often you will hear the drive spin up immediately.) Time to BACK UP (Grab the data and run).
· If it is spinning, power it down and clean the connector with the cleaner of your choice. I like pre-moistened alcohol prep pads from a medical supply. Put the cables back on and try again.
5. Sometimes, it helps to remove the PC
board from the drive and reinstall it. (Connector problem again.)
6. Disk utilities like SpinRite, Disk
First Aid, or Disk Rescue are useful (but only if the drive is
actually spinning.)
In every case, back up the data the
minute you see anything that even looks like a directory. Have a
drive ready to put it on. I like to have a disk drive connected
to my test machine and put everything there ASAP. You might be
advised to use the "new" drive that will go into the
user's machine. Don't put the "bad" drive back unless
you just like to make service calls over again. These steps have
made me a hero more than once on my 17 years as a PC tech and/or
salesman. Hope they work for you.
From: Geoff G.
Here's my solution to the quiz "How
do you bring a hard drive back to life?"
In order to make the best use of a drive
that may be failing, one could take
the following steps:
1. Check the system to see if the drive will detect and boot up successfully. If so, skip to step 5 for backup/data retrieval procedures.
2. If the drive is not detecting properly on the system, check to see if the problem can be solved in the systems bios, by either manually reconfiguring the drive, or by autodetecting it. If this works, skip to 5.
3. If the drive simply will not work in that system, try putting it in another system that is working properly with a similar hard drive (the same drive type and/or size if possible). If the drive works in this system, but not in the original system, then perhaps the old system has more serious problems such as a bad IDE controller.
4. Try booting up on the drive. If it will not boot properly, try FDISK or some other partition viewer to see if it has valid partitions defined. If no valid partitions are defined, or if partitions are unformatted, then the data may be lost. Try redefining to the exact same partitions that were known to exist before the problems were encountered. If you have a working drive at this point, but no data, then it is likely that data is gone. If irreplaceable data was lost, you can try bringing the drive to a hardware shop for professional data retrieval.
5. If any of these attempts to revive the drive has succeeded, then immediately bring the system up and back up any important files to another drive or to removable media. Run scandisk and/or any other drive checking utilities. If serious problems are found with the drive, or if you have suspicion that the drive will continue having more problems like this, then prepare to replace the drive. While you still have a working system, make a complete backup if possible. Perhaps the entire drive image can still be retrieved and copied onto the new drive, and no system re-install will be necessary.
From: Chris Heizmann
I. If the drive works intermittently and
won’t boot to Windows:
1) Create a boot disk on a different machine if available (format c: /s).
2) Use the boot disk to start the machine in DOS.
3) Switch to drive c:\.
4) Copy all data files to floppy (more than one disk will be needed).
II. If the drive does not work at all.
· 1) Open up the case.
· 2) Locate and remove the Hard Disk Drive.
· 3) Tap on the side of the hard drive with a screwdriver a few times (not too hard).
· 4) Re-install the drive and start the PC.
· 5) If the PC boots to Windows, backup all data files via MSbackup.
6) If the PC won’t boot to Windows,
follow the above instructions.
From: David A. Hunt
· First establish the correct drive characteristics (cylinders, sectors, kapazität usw.) from the drive or from internet if not printed on the casing.
· Check all cables and connections (Power, EIDE, or SCSI).
· Turn on the Power and correct the BIOS.
· Watch for failures such as controller failure during bios check.
· Listen for unpleasant noises (after head crash).
· If the PC won't boot from disk, use a boot disk in the floppy and establish if drive C is available.
· If not, try Fdisk and see if a drive is visible (if not, it's starting to look bad...).
· If visible and reachable, copy any important data to floppy disk (if possible) or another drive if available.
· Revive the boot block, and try booting from the drive again.
· If the drive wasn't visible, then remove the drive and try to revive it in another PC.
· Sometimes removing the drive and gently shaking it can help to revive it if the user hasn't been using his PC on a regular basis, especially in older PCs.
Anyway, this a problem one can spend hours with, it just depends on how important the data was. Only cowards work with a backup!!!!
From: Mauri Presser
· Check the CMOS setup for drive settings.
· If an auto detect drive option is there, use it.
· Save the settings and reboot.
· Listen to see if the drive is spinning by putting your ear close to the drive (hopefully the drive is not so loud that you do not need to get close to it to hear it).
· If it does not spin, shut down the computer.
· Check to make sure pin one of the cable is on pin one of the drive (you might have seen a steady drive activity LED lit up if it was backwards).
· If one was on one, then physically remove the drive and FIRMLY holding on to it, twist your wrist in an attempt to break the "sticktion" (bearings stuck) free.
· Hook the drive back up and power up to a boot floppy.
· If it spins up now, try FDISK or other third-party software to see if it recognizes the partition(s).
· If not, try Norton Disk Doctor or equivalent to try and recover the partition.
· If it does see the partition (or if you recovered it) try and read the files.
· If not, back to Norton Disk Doctor.
· If this does not work, it's time for Ontrack or other data recovery service (if the client will pay!). Good hunting!!
From: Karl DeGraff
The most successful methods I have used
are:
1. Find a computer with the exact same
operating system (Win 95, Win 98, etc.) that you can use as a
surrogate host. This works best if the secondary IDE channel is
unused, allowing the private use of that channel by the ailing
drive, and usually eliminating the need of changing jumpers.
2. Go to the drive's manufacturer's Web
site (or use a drive parameters database) to get the actual
physical drive parameters.
3. Set the surrogate computer's BIOS
parameters to expect the ailing drive and turn it off. Auto is
the best initial setting. Make sure the second IDE channel is
enabled and power management is off, at least for the hard drives.
4. Cable the ailing drive to the
surrogate computer's secondary IDE channel using a reasonably
long IDE cable (see reason for long cable below).
5. If the drive does not spin during
power up when it should (note that some SCSI drives have delayed
spin ups), take the drive, hold it in the fingertips of both
hands (spider on a mirror style), and rotate the drive's casing
around the disk platters inside suddenly (the reason for the long
IDE cable). The most effective motion is to prepare by rotating
slowly to a starting position where your fingers are turned
"up toward" your chest as far as is comfortable for you
wrists, then suddenly rotate "down out" from your chest
as far as is comfortable, and then immediately snap back to the
original position. This technique works by moving the casing with
respect to the platters based on the principle of inertia and
will often allow a drive with "frozen" bearings to spin
up one more time. Do not expect this technique to work twice!
6. If the drive does not spin up, see a
drive/data recovery lab that has the ability to disassemble the
drive to get at the platters and recover the data from them by
using specialized clean room equipment. When performed by a
qualified lab, this process is quite successful, but very
expensive—backups are much cheaper! Choose the right lab,
you usually only get one shot...
7. If the computer recognizes the drive,
proceed on to recovering the data by any means you desire. Note
that since the drive is not the boot drive and host operating
system, all of the boot and operating system information are
accessibl–e—no "in use" files!
8. If the computer does not recognize the
drive, especially if set to Auto, go to the BIOS and set the
drive parameters to the manufacturer specified values and reboot.
If still no recognition, try adjusting the values for sector
translation. There are several options for the primary
translation type (Normal, LBA, Large, etc.), but please note that
there may be other settings that also effect drive communications.
These other settings usually have values of Yes/No. Some of these
other settings are "large drive" (note there are many
different names for this setting), "enhanced mode,” and
"block mode.” The important thing is to try different
combinations of any of the settings that effect hard drive
communications for the second IDE channel. Hint, make a list of
all of the possible combinations and check off each one as you
try it.
9. Most important, try not to let
anything (e.g., operating system or "fix-it" programs)
mess with the disk contents until you have exhausted all other
avenues of access. These programs are great, but should be
reserved as the first line of defense against software corruption
and the last resort for hardware corruption. If your problem is a
hardware issue, these programs will usually "finish the job"
in terms of denying you the possibility of recovering you data.
Only use them AFTER the hardware problem has been corrected.
From: Dan Miley
I've had this happen before, and one
thing that worked for me involved the following:
The Hard Disk Assembly (HDA) is usually
separate from the IDE controller board. If the controller board
is the bad part, the data is still good, you just cannot get to
it. The symptoms for this are: Disk not spinning up at all,
"drive not found," or "no boot disk available"
type messages.
I've swapped the data module (HDA) from
the bad drive controller to a good replacement drive. Usually
it's just 4-6 screws and a couple small cables. Use static care
procedures as always when working with computer parts.
If the data is good, send the new HDA and
bad board back to be fixed, put the good drive (with original
data) back in, reboot, and away you go.
From: Jack Ho
· First of all, get yourself a Win95/98 startup disk and an emergency boot disk from your favorite virus-scanning software and disk-repairing programs.
· Second, note the number of drives in the system and reboot the machine. When it boots up, make sure you can hear the all drives spin up. If the spinning sounds are confusing, you may have to open up the case.
· If any of the drives didn't spin, turn off the PC and take the computer case off. Carefully unplug the drive cables and power cables and reconnect them. Then power up the system. If the drives still do not spin, swap the power cables and try again. If they still do not spin, then you know for sure those drives are dead. To retrieve data from these drives, you may have to take them to a nearby data recovery center and be prepared to spend some bucks. If they spin after you swap the cables, then you've got power problems, and you need to replace the power supply on the system.
· If the drive is spinning but the system does not recognize it, such as "invalid drive specification" or "disk 0" errors, cold boot the machine and enter CMOS setup. Make sure the disk controller (whether it is IDE or SCSI) is enabled. Set it to AutoDetect if it is an IDE drive. Set the correct SCSI options (by entering the appropriate SCSI utility) if it is a SCSI drive. Since the system was working before, I assume the SCSI IDs and master/slave parameters are correct. After the correct options are set, reboot the system. For an IDE drive, if the system still does not recognize it, manually enter the drive parameters in the CMOS set up and reboot again. If the system has a CD-ROM drive, note if it was being recognized by the system. If the system does not recognize both hard drives and CD-ROM drives, take the computer case off and replace the IDE cables (or SCSI cables if they are SCSI drives). Note any broken pins when you replace the cables. If there are any broken pins, you may have to replace the drives or motherboard.
· After you've replaced the cables, if the drives are still not being recognized, the drives may be bad. If you have a spare working drive, plug it in. If it works, then you know the other drives are bad: either a severe virus has contaminated the drives such that the drive parameters are overwritten, or there are physical errors with the drives. If the system does not even recognize your spare working drive, then the disk controller is bad and needs to be replaced.
· If the system recognizes the drive but does not boot up your OS, cold boot your system from a bootable virus ERD and do a complete scan of the failed drive. Repair any corrupted master boot records if possible. If the virus-scanning disk does not find any virus, cold boot the system with a bootable ERD from your favorite disk repairing software such as Norton Disk Doctor. If this still does not help, but you are able to access the data from a floppy boot disk, you can recover the system by backing up all your data and reinstalling the OS on the hard drive. If the failed drive can’t be accessed from a boot floppy and is not repairable by any "disk doctor" programs, take it to a data recovery center.
From: Robert K. Kuhn
Since you did not state what kind of hard
drive this is (MFM, RLL, SCSI, ESDI, IDE/EIDE), I'm going to
assume IDE/EIDE.
An "Invalid Drive Type" error
usually means that the wrong drive type has been selected in CMOS.
I am also going to assume that the BIOS/CMOS supports this hard
drive size (some older BIOS’s required a third party
software patch; drives that were 500 MB and larger for instance...).
If Auto Detect does not work or if the BIOS/CMOS setup does not
have an Auto Detect feature, then I would do as follows:
1. Verify that the drive is spinning up
and that all the cables are hooked up properly.
2. I would then verify that the drive
itself is configured/jumpered correctly (master/slave/single
drive). Most of your current IDE/EIDE drives have the jumper
setting on the drive itself, which makes it nice. Though some of
the older ones do not, which forces you to call their tech
support or search their Web site for jumper configuration.
3. If I had access to another computer, I
would either try swapping out the cable to see if I had a bad
cable or I would just simply install the "bad" drive
into the other computer and see if the BIOS/CMOS detects the
drive. If it does not, then chances are very good that the drive
is kaput. However, if the other computer does see the drive and I
am able to boot up with it, then I have to assume that there's a
problem with the other computer's IDE/EIDE controller. One last
attempt would be to find the geometry of the drive (cylinders,
heads, sectors) and add them in manually. If it booted fine with
the other computer, the geometry can be copied from there.
Otherwise, a call to the vendor or a search on their Web site
would be order. If the hard drive controller is found to be bad,
depending on the motherboard (going with the assumption that it
has an onboard controller with both a primary and secondary
controller), I would check the CMOS to make sure that the IDE
controller(s) were enabled. Sometimes you can boot from the
secondary IDE/EIDE controller, so I would try that too. If it
boots, great! Time for a new motherboard or perhaps just purchase
a new controller and disabling the onboard controller. But I
would seriously consider getting a new motherboard when budget
allows.
4. If I only had the one computer, then I
would have to search for a known good hard drive (and cable) that
the BIOS supports. Then if it too does not boot, then I would
have to guess it's something with the
controller/motherboard. If it does boot,
then I would have lean towards a bad drive.
5. Sometimes with an "Invalid Drive
Type", you can actually boot with a floppy (assuming that
the drive is not an NTFS, HPFS, LINUX, Novell NetWare or some
other format....) and then access the hard drive. If
this can be done, this might be one way
to back up any data. You can set up the "bad" drive as
"slave" and then with a new drive formatted with
whatever format is needed, copy over whatever data that can be
read on the "bad" drive.
Back in the good old days, when we had a
drive that went beyond the 1024 cylinders (which is 99.99 percent
of all the IDE/EDIE drives made since 1992 and on), we had to
"trick" the BIOS/CMOS. This was done by taking the
cylinders, dividing the number in half, and then doubling the
heads:
Example: 1138 cylinders, 8 heads, 63
sectors–s—this would translate to 569 cylinders, 16
heads and 63 sectors.
I would try this trick as perhaps my last
resort. But this was used/done on 386/486 machines back in the
late 1980s to early 1990s.
One last attempt, and I doubt that it
will work but it's worth a shot, would be to get Symantec's Ghost
or PowerQuest's Drive Image. A trial copy can be downloaded from
their site. See if a drive-to-drive image
can be made (from the old "bad"
drive to the "new" replacement drive). However, Ghost
and Drive Image must be able to read the "bad" drive's
partition. One could look into a sector-by-sector copying tool.
Back in the late 80s, I had one but for the life of me can't
remember who wrote it. But I remember it was shareware. Gibson
research, perhaps (the makers of SpinWrite, an excellent utility
for it's time...)
If the data is that important (mission
critical), a drive recovery center would have to deal with it.
But be prepared to pay for it! We've had to use a local data
recovery center (Hard Disks Only) and Gibson Research in the past
to rebuild a bad drive. Not cheap but would have cost us more had
we not been able to recover the data. Gibson Research is perhaps
the best out of the two we've dealt with.
Some other things to consider include
that a bad power supply can also cause a hard drive not to boot (not
allowing it to spin up to full RPM), the amperage required to
spin the motor is more than what the motherboard draws/needs even
if it has a full bus. Also, I've even seen some ISA, PCI, and AGP
cards cause conflicts with onboard IDE/EIDE controllers (usually
in the form of IRQ and/or memory address). Though these are
usually funky-specialized boards, I have seen it happen.
Again, I am assuming that the drive is an
IDE/EIDE. If it's an MFM, RLL, ESDI or SCSI, then the tactics
would differ slightly as each are set up and controlled
differently. But since IDE/EIDE is perhaps the popular and most
used drive, I am going to assume that is the drive.
From: Jim Davison
Since you did not state IDE/SCSI, I will
assume IDE. I will also assume that drive is not using a bios
modifier like those used to make older motherboards support
larger drives. (I have seen situations where users tried to enter
drive specks in setup for SCSI drives).
I would use the following steps even
considering that you state the user had "Tried" to
manually enter the settings in setup and also tried auto. The
user may not know what they are doing. I also would not trust the
error codes. I would assume the error codes are only letting us
know there is a problem but would not trust the codes to give an
accurate description of what the problem is.
1. In setup, Try IDE Auto Detect to see
if the bios can even see the drive.
If yes, then I would use that setting and
everything should be OK.
If yes, and the drive still does not
boot, I would use fdisk/mbr in case the Master boot record was
destroyed.
If no, then I would go to step 2.
2. Open the box and check all power and
data cables.
(I have seen Molex type power connectors
lose a connection intermittently even if they are plugged in
tightly) you need to wiggle them around. (I have also seen one
case where the data cable came loose when the computer was moved).
If cables were the problem, then you
should be okay now.
If you still have a problem, go to step 3.
3. Other Drives are bad and interfering
with the boot disk
In case anything else is sharing the IDE
bus with the drive, e.g., a CD-ROM, then disconnect anything that
is also connected to the IDE bus and recheck the Master/Slave
settings if necessary and try again.
4. Possibly a faster way to check if the
problem is the drive or something else
Remove the drive and plug it into another
computer and see if the other computer can detect the drive. If
yes, then the problem is a cable, motherboard, etc. on the
computer, so go to step 5.
5. CMOS or Flash problem
Put the drive or at least a drive back on
the computer with the problem. Go to setup and reload the bios
from defaults and then redo the settings and save. Then try the
IDE auto detect. If this does not work and your system has flash
upgrades, then reload the flash. Might as well check for upgrades
before refreshing. After refreshing, then again reload the
defaults and save settings. Reboot into setup and try the auto
detects again.
If the BIOS can now see the drive but the
drive still does not boot, then you may need to reload the OS or
at least replace the necessary drivers.
If the thing still is not working, then
it is most likely a defective drive and you will need to decide
how badly you need the data on the drive. If you need the data,
then I would send the drive to a data recovery lab that can
extract the data from a dead drive and save the data to a tape,
CD, HD, etc. This can be expensive but may be worth it.
From: Ron Charity
A trick I was told that sometimes works
is to remove the drive from the PC (leave power and data
connected), lean it on its side and attempt reboots.
From: Phil Murphy
First thing I would do is to check the
BIOS to make the sure the disk is set to Auto and doesn't have
any settings in it. Then I would reboot the computer using the
Win95/98 Setup disk and run fdisk to check to make sure that
there are partitions visible. If there are no partitions visible,
then I would have to assume that the data on the drive has
departed. Next, if I do see a partition, then I will exit fdisk
and go right the C drive. I would run a directory on it to see if
all of the files are intact. If they have strange names and
numbers, then the drive has suffered a serious malfunction and
the data is not retrievable. If the directory appears to be in
good shape, then I would use Drive Image to make a image file of
the hard drive and move it to either a zip disk or a CD-ROM, for
the next time this happens.
From: Shawn Cole
· Get a second Hard Drive larger than the current broke or fairly non-functioning one.
· Make Disk #1 OLD Drive Slave and the new one Master because you want the new one to become your Primary Boot Drive.
· Format and FDISK the New Drive into one or two partitions. I do two for personal reasons, Format c: so it's bootable.
·
Go buy a program called LOST & FOUND V1.0 from www.necx.com under software, disk
utilities from the company POWERQUESTCORPORATION found at
http://necxdirect.necx.com/cgi-bin/auth/manuinfo_q?key=POWERQUEST+CORPORATIO for a price of $55.95 and follow the
instructions in the book to the letter.
· Restart machine with the L&F disk in and follow the on screen prompts, and it will COPY all the data you choose. When it’s complete, it will give you a report of success and/or failure on particular files.
And as long as the hard drive is not
physically destroyed, you will be able to copy over all the
recoverable data . The nice thing about this is it COPIES only—no
writing to the messed-up drive. I used this very successfully on
a drive that the FAT became corrupt on and would not ID or boot
up on.
From: Tomer Har Nesher
Hi, I have three ideas:
1) Install the hard drive on other
machine that is running same OS. If the disk partition is FAT or
FAT32, you can start the machine by using WIN98 system diskette
without install the hard drive on other machine.
2) We found some problems with hard drive
that happen after few minutes of work. In this case, you should
disconnect the hard drive from power (by turning off the machine)
for few minutes, then turn it on and back up immediately until it
will be warm again and you'll not be able to read the data.
Do it until you'll have all files copied.
3) If you have same drive (SAME MODEL),
you can replace the unreachable disk's main board and trying to
read the data.
From: NETSPECS
There is no one way to this matter to the
disk drive quiz. So I am going to give it a try. I have had this
problem in the past, actually a few times.
· I checked to see if there are any viruses that affected the Fat table of the drive, and then I used a hard drive that was sys'ed and set the other one as slave. I was able to read the partition and copy the data over. If that didn't work use ex: Norton disk doctor or any other disk examiner and see if that was able to correct the problem. Run it off the first hard drive.
· One other way it could be done is if you knew that the controller board on the hard drive was bad is to replace that board with a exact one off of another PC and go back into setup and use auto to reconfigure. I have only used this method once and it worked.
From: Darren Brown
Hmmm....gotta hate those hard drive
problems.....
"The sounds of the game"
Let’s take a look at the hard drive
itself. Is it plugged in properly? Just ask the customer a polite
question about it possibly being moved or bumped. Loose cables
are the most common problem in a case like this. If it is plugged
in properly, just try to boot it again after checking the
connections. Sometimes a connector did come out a bit on one side
and you put it back properly without noticing.
"Put the right spin on things"
Next, is the drive spinning when you turn
the computer on? If it isn't, check the power cable to the drive.
If that was fine, tap the drive lightly on the side to see if it
spins up. Sometimes that works (if it does, back it up and order
a new drive immediately!). I encountered a drive that acted like
this a year ago. If you kept tapping it, it kept spinning. So,
for three hours, I sat there tapping this drive until I got all
the company's accounting data off of it. Sometimes you have to
make sacrifices for your customers.
"Something SCSI this way comes"
This may seem stupid, but is the drive a
SCSI drive? Again, check the cables and the termination. Boot up
and check the SCSI bios to see if it is set up properly.
"Back to the Bios"
If the drive is spinning and the cables
are properly seated, check the "Detect IDE Hard drives"
in the bios. For some reason, on some of the older motherboards,
it will pick up a drive that "AUTO" won't pick up.
"Swap meet"
The old "swap" maneuver. Is
there another drive in the company that is exactly the same? Back
up that drive and remove it from the other computer. Remove the
logic board on that one and transplant in onto the drive that
isn't detecting. Boot up. If it detects, get the data off of it
and return the logic board to the other drive. Double check that
the drive you took the logic board still works! (Warning! Not for
the faint of heart! May result in two defective drives!)
"Third Party!!!"
Get out the big guns. Tiramisu from
Ontrack or DrivePro from Microhouse are great tools to get into
spinning drives. DrivePro to set up the drive in the bios, and
Tiramisu to retrieve the data.
"Never believe everything you hear!"
One thing to remember, listen to the
problem the customer has, but find your own solution! I fell into
that trap once "I tried this and that,” and yet, after
a couple of hours of painful work, I tried the customer’s
solutions, too. Sure enough, the customer may have tried those
solutions, but he didn't do them properly.
These are presented in no particular
order. You will do things differently depending on the situation
(usually check the bios first and see the problem for yourself,
then try to boot it up without doing anything to the machine.
Based on the sounds the drive makes, or doesn't, this will give
you a place to start your problem-solving skills). Also, if the
drive does detect, but has bad sectors, try Scandisk (thorough
option) or Norton Utilities Disk Doctor. A bad sector can make a
bad day too. And a rule of thumb for bad sectors, even one grown
bad sector means there is a problem, and should be replaced.
Manufacturers may argue this, but in the field, you don't want to
take anything for chance.
I really hope these help you out.
From: Rod Lee
My solution is as follows: Send the
faulty drive and a new (fully tested and compatible) drive to the
newly-formed TechRepublic support company where, for a very
reasonable fee, the industry-leading expert technicians will
solve the problem for me and copy all data onto the new disk!
As well as fixing the immediate problem,
a new system will be installed whereby if data is not backed up
within a specified period, or if the disk exhibits any pre-crash
symptoms (whatever they might be!), the disk will be halted and
all access to the disk will be prohibited without a special
password known only to TechRepublic and myself. Thus, for another
reasonable fee, I will be able to go to the customer’s
premises and save the day, thereby being accorded the status of
"Hero" for recovering from a catastrophic system crash
(and maybe even getting a cash bonus to boot)!
From: Michael Dal Lago
Maybe try the following;
· Boot from a bootable disk that every good IT tech has and carries. Now you should carry bootable Windows 98 disks with files like Fdisk, Format, Chkdsk, and other diagnostics files. Now if you have an NT system with NTFS, you can boot with OS2 bootable diskettes; with will read NTFS.
· If the BIOS still sees the HD but you cannot access it, your Master Boot Record may be defective. If this is so you may be able to recover it with the following command (Fdisk/mbr). This should recover the master boot record so you can read the drive.
· After that, you may be able to run DOS base backup software. Make sure that you realize long file names are not supported by DOS.
· If you wish to copy files to a different one, maybe you can use XCOPY32 to copy LFNs.
Of course, if the user was not backing up
the system before this would be a good time to buy backup
software since you will be in the store for the new HD. You may
also use software like GHOST to make a image of the HD when it is
running and install this image and ghost software to a bootable
CD. When the system does crash, which will happen no matter what
you do, remember to always plan for the worse. If you make the CD
bootable, you can recover from a crash just by booting from the
CD.
Another suggestion I would have is have
an Application disk that contains all the applications and a
different one for data. Keep a good daily backup of the data disk
and maybe a backup of the application drive when major changes
are performed.
From: John Dalnes
Already had this one this week. User
deleted command.com and wouldn't boot. Tomorrow's presentation on
the drive. Installed as secondary master in another machine and
transferred data to the server. Reformatted and back online the
next day.
From: John Callison
1. Run diagnostic, check post, check for
error messages. These could indicate controller failure, etc.
2. Try hard drive as slave in another
computer.
3. If the above does not get me access to
the data, contact manufacturer and overnight drive to them. They
may be able to fix the drive enough to get the data off of it or
repair it without erasing the data.
4. Sell them a new hard drive and a tape
back up or jaz drive, etc. It is best to max out the sales to
them at this point as expensive lessons are usually the best
learned.
5. If they call again with the same
problem, no backups etc., give them the number of your
competition.
From: Jim Burns
Check or swap the power supply to see if
it's putting out the proper voltage. This can give a disk failure
message during bootup.
From: Bailey, Vince
I would try fdisk /mbr to try and restore
the master boot record to the drive.
From: William Perry
I would remove the hard drive, set it as
a slave and install it in another computer as a slave. Copy data
to another location. Run scan disk and defrag if drive will run
at all. Reinstall in original computer and try it. If still
fails, go to step 2.
2. I would remove the hard drive, set it
as a slave, and install it in another computer as a slave. Copy
data to another location. Reformat the drive, install a copy of
startup files, then all other files if they do not contain errors
(try opening them on the host computer).
3. If the above fails, install a new hard
drive and salvage as much data and files as possible.
From: Robert Hird
Try the hard drive as a secondary IDE in
another computer, (e.g.: your own, seeing as you are so nice).
After booting, burn the info on CD, and run the disk utilities
from your computer.
From: Bill E. Garity
I would try to use Fdisk /MBR—perhaps
the master boot record is corrupted.
From: Sprynet
· If the drive 0 cannot be accessed at all, not even by the Setup program, it could be that the cables inside the machine are not properly connected, or cracked suddenly (heat always dries the plastic wire cover and sometimes it breaks).
· If I don't hear the hard disk noise when I turn on the machine, it can also be that the hard disk is not receiving any power. In this case I would also check the power cable and the connections.
· If all is well connected and receiving power, the I/O controller (onboard or on a separate card) may be damaged. I would try to connect the ribbon to the other existing port(s). I sometimes connect the hard drive to another computer too.
· If the I/O controller is fine, the hard disk is receiving power, then I boot from a diskette. I always keep DOS diskettes in all versions (5.0, 6.0, 6.22).
· Try to access C:\>
· If it doesn't work, I try the setup program again. Auto configure will not work? I use USER and type in the parameters written on the hard disk (of course I have to open the machine to find out). If it still doesn't wor–k—if when I enter C:\ the computer returns "Bad command ..." or "Invalid drive...,” or anything for that matter, I will try Norton utilities or another third-party hard disk utility.
· If it is a Western Digital, I will try EZDrive tools. If nothing works, I tell the client to be more serious about backing up next time.
From: Dan Nicolay
1. Complete hard drive failure (catastrophic
hardware failure within drive) (clunking, etc.–)—send
out to a lab if data is critical.
2. Can attempt to manually configure
drive in bios–—open case and get heads, cylinders, etc.,
if bios won't auto detect.
If that fails…
3. Place drive in another system, attempt
auto detect, etc. If the drive is detectable, but not bootable,
solution will depend on whether it’s home system, whether it
has network access, etc. By far the easiest solution is making a
Ghost image (Symantec) and use Ghost Explorer to extract
essential files. Gives you a backup and allows you to extract
files that frequently aren't even accessible on a corrupt drive
in a DOS or Windows session when attempting data recovery.
A Ghost image can either be sent to
another drive in a system or using a boot disk or with network
protocols (copied to a network drive). With the "ghost"
image, you can check the drive and start over if the failure is
not drive hardware related.
From: C L Gillies
1. Try going into setup cmos and
correcting the hard drive settings (primary master) from Auto to
User/LBA, whatever it was supposed to be; exit and save settings.
2. If this does not work, order
Symantec's Ghost and make a clone.
Hope this works. Of course, you could try
reinstalling the operating system after formatting but you'd lose
all data without a backup.
From: Dave Adams
· The first thing I would do is ask the user what system he/she normally booted to.
· Then I would cold boot the PC, go into CMOS, and autodetect the hard drive.
· If it did not detect, I would open the unit, verify the connections and try again.
· If it still did not autodetect, I would try my spare test hard drive.
· If my spare worked, I would test the user's original hard drive in another computer.
· Assuming I got the hard drive autodetecting in the CMOS, I would then verify boot order in CMOS, usually A, then CD, then C.
· I would next cold boot to a virus scan diskette and verify the hard drive could be accessed and free of viruses. The diskette I use automatically removes any viruses detected.
· If I get to this point, I would again try to cold boot to the hard drive. Obviously, there would be some type of error message or symptom at this point to let me know better where I was in resolving this issue.
· If I received "missing operating system" on a Windows 95 machine, I would attempt to transfer the operating system from the appropriate media. If it was a Windows 98 machine, I would use a Windows 98 boot disk to boot to an A: prompt and then use the Scanreg command, view the log, and use an file that was dated long enough ago to hopefully restore the registry.
· If it was an NT machine, hopefully the user had a NT Emergency Boot Disk specific to that unit and I would use it and go the "Repair" route.
· After this, I would check with tech support, because I would not want to overlook something that could help me avoid reloading her original hard drive, as quite a few users never back up their data.
· If tech support came up with a solution, I would be sure to add it to my notebook so next time I could resolve the issue more quickly, efficiently, and professionally.
From: Brad Lewandowski
Well, since you said you were going to
replace the drive, I see the options as these:
· Boot from a floppy with a full set of DOS utilities, double checking BIOS settings, fdisk, etc.…
· Use Interlnk and Intersvr and start a xfer
· Yank the drive out, change it to a slave, stick it in a functioning computer and xcopy/Ghost
· Maybe the MBR is bad, try copying one over with Sys command...
· God forbid you should send the drive to a 'Data Recovery' place...
From: P. Christensen
· Go to bios and ask the machine to automatically detect the hard drive. Sometimes it loses the hard drive due to a virus or faulty battery.
· If the machine finds the hard drive, go in and do a virus scan. If the battery made the bios lose the info, you shouldn't shut off the machine until the hard drive data files are backed up. Monkey B virus will alter the boot sector and make the hard drive disappear.
· Sometimes you have to be sure that in bios the machine will boot to A and then C and then make sure it has recognized the C drive in bios and then do a virus scan.
From: Murray Voight
· You need to be able to boot into the system.
· First get a generic boot disk that will allow this.
· If you’re able to boot up, then see if you can access the C drive through DOS.
· If you can access the C drive, then you should be able to access the files on the C drive.
· If you can't access the files, then try running a scandisk from the boot floppy.
· If you can't access the BIOS or the C drive through a boot disk, then the next step you need to do is shut down the computer and pull out the hard drive.
· Once you have the hard drive out you need to douse it in lighter fluid and immediately expose the non-functioning hard drive to an open flame.
· Although the last step is of great controversy, it will bring great satisfaction to know humans will always have the last word.
From: Howard J. Castello
Boot from floppy drive and then try
running fdisk/mbr.
From: Andrzej Bednarz
The answer to the hard drive question is
more complex than you may think, but the bottom line is that you
really need to know how damaged is your hard drive or rather how
much functionality is left in the hard drive.
· First, I would try to approach the problem by distinguishing if it is a hardware or software issue. If the problem is software-related, for example, the operating system is corrupted, the hard drive can be attached as a "slave" and the important data copied to the "master" bootable drive. Many times that approach can be used even for hardware-related problems, for example, when the hard drive is getting flaky, but it's not broken yet.
· It is a lot easier to prepare yourself for the broken hard drive, but to really motivate yourself for any preventive steps, you'd have to answer the question: would I be still OK if my hard drive crashes today? Also, how much time do I want to spent for a data and/or system recovery?
· Over years, I was developing many different methods of data recovery and backup, therefore the following is the fastest and probably the most reliable method of doing so. First of all, install the OS with all the associated programs and utilities including MS Office, Internet browsers, etc.
· When you test everything and you're sure that everything is the way you want, you can take an image of your hard drive by using Norton Ghost.
· For the files that you create from now on until next computer crash, create a folder called "data" and in that folder subdirectories for MS Office, PhotoShop, etc.
· From now on, all you have to do is to backup your "data" directory to the CD and copy the Ghost image to the second CD, and if you need to restore your system, it would take you anywhere from 5 to 20 min to have everything back where it was.
· If your hard drive snapshot image is bigger than 650 MB, choose option to compress the image during the process. If after compression the image is still bigger than 650 MB, you can split the image on as many chunks as you need, for example 20 chunks to backup 13-GB hard drive without compression.
From: Mike Fogarty
I have a really quick, no real science
approach to this problem. Assuming that the drive will still
spin, there is a quick, however with some risk involved, solution.
In past situations, I have successfully
accessed a damaged drive by "replacing the drive.”
This method involves the EXACT SAME DRIVE
as the one in question.
Step 1 With all power off,
remove the hard drive in question and place it on the side where
it can be easily accessed.
Step 2 Install the "NEW"
drive (a drive of the same type, and manufacturer).
Step 3 Start the system up
and get it to recognize the new drive. It is important to only
start a command line session. Remember that we are only trying to
copy some files here—this is an emergency maneuver. Also,
the drive must be formatted the same as the drive we are
questioning here.
Step 4 With the system
RUNNING (be careful, this is the risky part I told you about, do
it in this sequence), VERY QUICKLY detach the power umbilical
from the running drive. Then detach the data ribbon cable from
the running drive.
Step 5 VERY CAREFULLY reach
for our drive in question and attach the data ribbon cable to it.
Next, VERY QUICKLY place all four contacts simultaneously in
contact with the drives power connection.
Step 6 Now enter at the
keyboard some command—I use the DIR command. You should see
the list of files for the questionable drive that you have HOT
PLUGGED into this system. You should now be able to access the
files needed to get you over the hump!
What has happened?
The system "thinks" it has the
bootable drive you started it with and will allow you to use the
device with the exception of booting with it, of course! This
approach works quite well on drives that have sector one
physically trashed.
From: Tron
My business is built on 100 percent On-Site
Service. I carry most everything in my van that a 'shop' would
have. I have a power inverter for AC power and two network-ready
systems at my disposal for backing up customer data or to use as
a loaner. Anything to get the customer back in business.
First: I boot from a floppy and
run a program called "IDEID" that will identify the
drive. I then compare these results with what is in the BIOS. I
also will see if the BIOS can automatically and correctly
identify the drive. If not, I use the user-defined fields.
Second: A.) I boot from a floppy
and do a virus scan on drive C:. If C is there.
B.) If C is not ther–e—I carry a few older hard
drives with various boot managers on them. I'll make my drive
master and boot from it letting my boot manager load. This would
allow me to see their drive if I used the right boot manager.
C.) If no boot manager is being used, and C is not present,
I use Norton's "NDD/REBUILD" to recover the dos
partitions. NOTE: ALWAYS MAKE THE UNDO DISK!
D.) If C is now seen, step B may need to be repeated.
Third: With C back, I'll identify
the version of Dos/Win9X on the system—I carry boot files
for all versions back to MS-DOS 3.3.
Fourth: Boot off of C if possible,
"SYS C:" if it is not possible, Reboot!
Fifth: I use Drive Image to Dupe
to an image on a 8.4 GB (remember the 8.4-GB limit!) drive that I
carry with me. I let the customer put in a password so they feel
secure in my not looking at their data. The above is predicated
on the fact that the drive will spin up. If it doesn't, I
sometimes have luck in placing the drive upside-down. Sometimes,
I'll quickly spin my wrist when I turn the power on. The upside-down
mostly worked on the ST1120A/ST3120A drives (Seagate 120M). I
have no definitive answer as to why. The ST138R had a problem
with what I call "STICTION.” This is my opinion,
Seagate! I theorize that the armature would get stuck between the
poles of the magnetic fields. In any case, those days are mostly
gone.
This is usually the extent that I go to.
After this, the customer must decide if the data on the drive is
worth the cost of the recovery. I end by selling the customer a
new drive and restoring their data from the image. This is
usually on a second visit since I don't make it a habit of
stocking drives for sale in my van.
From: Peter Becker
This has worked about 6-8 times over the
last 5 years...
I have found the drive is not spinning...
If this is the problem, just remove it
and rotate the drive quickly and immediately reverse direction.
You may have to repeat 2-3 times. It
works for a while...
This appears to be more of a problem with
old Laptops.
From: Bill Rankin
1. First some background info is needed:
A. Does the BIOS recognize/see the HD? (Correct
drive settings? Disk Manager in use?)
B. What is the OS? (Win 95/NT/Linux/etc.?)
C. What is the partition type? (Fat16/32/NTFS/etc.?)
2. If A. is yes, and C. is Fat16/32, try
a boot diskette (Win95/98). A command prompt, a couple of
utilities, and a working parallel port will get your data off
safely.
3. If A. is yes, and C. is NTFS; try a
new hard drive as C:, load a new NT/NTFS system, and access the
"dead" NTFS drive as the D:. Sometimes the hard drive's
onboard controller can fail, yet be chained to another's board a
là master/slave mode. Copy the data off ASAP and ditch the old
drive to avoid the temptation to keep it as spare storage.
4. If A is no, try another computer—the
BIOS/motherboard/CPU/memory/IO controller may be dead or
malfunctioning. Troubleshoot the computer later when you have
time.
5. If all else fails, attempt a drive
recovery with Hard Drive Mechanic, or similar drive utility. If
successful, copy the data off ASAP.
6. If the data is EXTREMELY valuable, and
if you have a certified clean room/booth (or a professional
service), transfer the disk platters into a exact duplicate
working drive. This is a very costly option due to the
requirements of a certified clean room/booth.
7. Last, but not least, PREACH TAPE
BACKUPS!
LEGALESE: These techniques have been used
by me to recover failed hard drives. Use of any of these
techniques does not in any way bind me, nor any companies
associated with me, liable for your attempts, actions, or losses
as your circumstances may be dissimilar or conditions not covered
by the aforesaid instructions. Be sure to get technical advise
from a reliable source familiar with your situation.
From: Jon Torbert
Well, things are a little ambiguous here.
Do we know that we are working on the Compaq Prolinea 4/66? Since
it didn't specify, I will keep this somewhat general.
· The first step would be to boot off of a DOS startup disk and see if you can access drive C. If you can, then you at least know that you can manually save some crucial files on the machine. If the C drive is not accessible, then you need to go into the CMOS settings and see if the proper drive parameters are entered. If it is a newer machine, you can sometimes find a section in CMOS that will query the hard drive and determine the proper settings.
· If there is no such section, then you need to open up the computer and see if the drive settings, like heads, cylinders, sectors/track, etc, are listed on the drive.
· If none are found, get the drive make and model number and go to the company's Web site and get the parameters. Now go back into CMOS and enter the proper settings for your HD. Hopefully this will solve the problem since it was mentioned that the person had been in trying to input the setting themselves.
· If the drive still won't boot, and you are getting a "non system disk" error, I have found that sometimes you can copy the sys.com program onto your startup disk (I keep a generic boot disk around with various files like fdisk, format.com, sys.com, etc on it.) and at the A: prompt type sys c: which transfers the system files to the HD.
· If you are instead getting Invalid drive specification errors, you probably aren't able to access the HD at all, even at a DOS prompt. If this is the case, you probably need to try reviving the drive with a program like Norton Disk Doctor. You have probably lost partition info or your File Allocation Table (FAT.) These are things that Norton DD can sometimes fix. If none of these things works, it is probably a lost cause. Write it off to experience. Everyone gets this fatal wake up call every once in a while to remind them about backing up crucial data.
From: Ronald E Rietz
1.) Examine all connections inside and
outside the PC to ensure they are secure. Remove and label the
suspect drive. Make sure all fans are operating correctly. Obtain
a replacement hard drive and install the operating system and Web
browsing capabilities. Retain the box in which your replacement
drive was shipped in case you need to ship your suspect drive
away to a media recovery firm. Visit the Web site of the hard
drive vendor and download the latest version of the vendor's
diagnostic program as well as information regarding drive's
geometry and jumper options. Determine the keyboard strokes to
get into setup mode as well as setting up disk drives for auto
detect, etc. Have an ample supply of blank formatted diskettes
readily available. Make sure you have space available to copy any
needed files from the suspect drive. Make a boot diskette. FDISK,
FORMAT, EDIT, SCANDISK, CD-ROM drivers, and the hard drive
vendors diagnostic programs should all be on the diskette.
2.) Install the suspect drive as a slave.
Carefully handle the suspect drive as to not bump it around at
all. It may be in a _very_ fragile state at this time. Close the
PC’s case or otherwise ensure that there is positive air
flow across the suspect drive.
3.) Take a break, think about how you
will do the following carefully and as fast as possible to avoid
possibly damaging the drive further.
4.) Turn on the monitor, insert your
diskette from step one. Turn on the PC and go into setup.
Determine whether or not the setup program auto-detects the
suspect drive. If auto-detect is OK, the disk drive's controller
is OK and proceed to the next step. If auto-detect is not OK, the
hard drives controller card(s) are faulty. Try substituting a
different controller card from another drive of the same type, if
available. Assuming the controller is faulty and swapping the
external controller card does not fix the trouble, you have a
choice of sending the drive off to have the controller card
repaired in a clean room or to abandon your data.
5.) If the auto-detection was OK, let the
PC boot with your diskette. Use FDISK and see if it detects the
suspect drive as a partition. If FDISK does not see the drive,
you have an internal problem, quite possibly a damaged read/write
head or an internal IC. You now have a choice of sending the
drive off to be repaired in a clean room or abandoning your data.
6.) If FDISK detected the partition, you
may have a damaged file structure. Boot the PC with your diskette
and then do something simple like a DIR. You are not ready to
even think about writing anything to the suspect drive at this
time! If you can not do a DIR, you may be able to recover the
drive with Norton or your own favorite program. Keep and label
recovery diskettes (don't reuse them), you might need to
backtrack.
7.) If you can do a DIR, try booting up
your machine normally. It may be possible to copy directories and
files across to your new drive. Give priority to the user's data
such as mail files, data files, settings, and similar. You
probably want to try copying the registry files as well.
8.) After you have copied the user’s
data, try SCANDISK with the thorough option. Always save the
files and always make recovery diskettes. The saved files may
just need to be examined and renamed.
9.) If there are any bad spots on the
suspect disk, try repairing them with the vendor's diagnostic
tools.
10.) After you are satisfied you have
recovered all of the data from the suspect drive, do a low level
format with the vendor's diagnostic program. Do an FDISK and an
operating system format and then reuse the drive as you wish. A
second hard drive in a system makes a reasonable place to do
quick backups as well as for swap files, temporary files,
temporary internet files, and the like.
From: Tom Hayes
Recently we had a user with a Tecra 520
CDT lose his hard drive. It could have been a surge or some other
problem but the electronics of the drive wouldn't work. We simply
ordered a new identical drive and exchanged the electronics board
connected to the drive, and we were able to access the drive to
recover the 250-MB mail file the user had to have recovered.
From: Raymond S Cross
Not all hard drive problems are hard
drive problems. I had a situation like this just recently.
Computer booted with a 'fixed disk 0 failure'. Turns out the
drive itself was okayI—it was a motherboard problem,
possibly a bad IDE connector. I had recently put in a new
motherboard, so I swapped the old one back in and the hard disk
worked fine!
From: hhewel
I would have a spare fdisked and
formatted hard drive running whatever O/S was needed, install it
into the down computer as the new master drive, change the jumper
on down drive to slave, reboot, run CMOS, setup auto hard drive
detect, and setup drives, reboot, and retrieve info on the bad
hard drive using new temp drive. Once new hard drive comes in,
fdisk, format, install O/S and software.
From: Coy Thorp
First thing I would do is eliminate
possible problem areas.
· I'd switch the drive to the secondary IDE chain and see if it auto configs. If not, I’d try it in another machine if that is possible (it is possible in my lab).
· Hopefully, I'd be able to get a drive letter and boot up to recover data.
· If neither of these work (and you're usually lucky if they do), then it's time to boot to a virus scan floppy and scan the boot sector for viruses.
· If there are none, then I'd move to a third-party utility, like NDD, and give that a whirl. If all of those fail, then I send it out to a data recovery center and drop 1,200 bucks of my company's money to recover data that the developer should have backed up in the first place.
From: Jeffery Aronson
After the routine checks of CMOS and
drive settings etc., the most important step would be to clone
the drive first as it is. I would recommend a program such as
ghost, but there are others available. After completing the drive
clone, work with the drive that you cloned and not the original
drive. You can use a program called On The Wire or Drive Wizard.
These programs will attempt to rebuild the various different
aspects of the drive, FAT tables, Directory Structures, Files
Structure etc. In most cases, you can at least get enough of the
drive back to get to that important data, and never risk the
original drive.
From:Tim Danner
· Make sure you put the drive type back to Auto in the CMOS. Then listen to hear if the drive is even spinning up. If the drive isn't spinning up, you can try the old tap technique to try and wake up the drive. If you are able to wake the drive, have the user backup important files immediately. Then replace.
· If the dive is spinning but it still isn't seen by the POST, then you need to try and locate a drive of the same make and model. Swapping the controllers on the two drives may allow you to access the data.
· If neither of these techniques help, then I usually tell the user to have a good cry, and then start over. But this time make sure you backup important files on a regular basis.
From: Steve Summers
I would suspect a bad disk controller
first. Before I replaced it, though, if I was lucky enough to get
the drive to come up, I would immediately run scan disk and scan
the surface area. If everything checked out, I would replace the
drive controller and see if the problem went away on the same
problematic drive.
From: Chris
The way I would approach this is to use
one of several disk-cloning programs such as Drive Copy or Norton
Ghost. Both of these programs create boot disks that you can use
to "rescue" a failing or error prone hard drive. You
boot with this disk and then select either copying a partition to
another partition (on another drive) or simply clone the entire
hard drive. This process is very fast (depending on the machine)
and very reliable. It copies all files and even preserved FAT
setup and partitions when cloning a hard drive.
Another excellent tool to have in your
arsenal is the Norton Boot Disks that will have the Dos versions
of Norton scan disk and disk doctor as well as the Unerase and
Unformat. These tools can restore lost files and correct and
identify many more problems than just Microsoft scandisk even
when using the 'scandisk /all' command.
Also, try replacing the IDE cable(s) to
eliminate the possibility that there is a bad cable. If the error
still happens, then the hard drive has probably failed. There is
a remote chance that using MaxBlast or a similar hard drive
utility from its manufacturer will at least identify and
hopefully repair the problem. Otherwise...remember hindsight is
always 20/20. Especially after you lose data...
From: Salman Siddiqui
There would be a couple of points to
check before going into recovery mode:
1. Is LBA mode on or off? Toggling it and
setting drive type to auto may help.
2. Was a Disk Manager type program in
use? If it was, refreshing the MBR with the Disk Manager may do
the trick.
If first has been tried and answer to the
second question is no, I would use a low level disk editor to
discover the bounds of the partitions, first and last cylinder.
Remaining data, number of heads, and sectors per track can be
worked out easily.
From: Thomas Bounds
Of the many different solutions that
could solve this problem, I will start with the easiest.
· First, does the drive even power up? (Do you hear the platters spinning?) If not, check all connections. Otherwise, you have just acquired another paperweight (since you will have to resort to snail mail until you can get online again).
· If you do hear the platters spinning, I would resort to trying the simple options in BIOS such as LBA mode on or off and HDD Block mode. Change them to their opposite state and try to reboot now. There are aftermarket utilities that can detect the logical parameters of a drive such as DrivePro by Microhouse. This handy (old) tool has gotten me out of many jams in the 486 HDD world. It will tell you the parameters that the drive was set up for so that you may manually enter them into the HDD config. section of BIOS. This is also handy if you happen to be the (not so) proud owner of a drive with an overlay installed. If that is the case, you will probably want to use the overlay install disk to repair or replace the overlay.
· The problem could be related to the HDD controller. Try replacing it. I could rant for a long time on other solutions, but I don't have time to get into it that deep.
From: William Maxwell
Hard drive failures can result from a
number of causes.
· First line of business is to talk with the client: Was the machine recently moved? Were any boards recently installed? A cable may have come loose during one of these operations. Check external causes, e.g. loose and/or oxidized connectors. Don't discard the possibility of little rodents–—I've seen flat cable gnawed through by these little critters.
· Don't forget to check the power cable to the drive–—no juice, no data.
· There's always a possibility that the on-board controller is shot, so to eliminate that factor I would remove the drive, jumper it to be drive 1 and install it in a known good machine.
· That done, I turn to a setup program called EZDrive by Micro House International. With it you can read and configure drive setup data, backup and restore track 0 or copy an entire partition.
· Summing up: First of all, be a good listener. Observe carefully, use good tools and be creative.
I got a call from a client who had been away for three weeks and had gotten back to find his machine wouldn't boot up. When I listened to his machine as it was turned on, I noticed that the drive motor wasn't spinning. Since we live in a very high humidity climate (the Amazon Rain Forest), I had an idea of what had happened. I politely asked him if he would get me a glass of water, as it was quite hot that day. As soon as he left the room I gave his drive a smart rap on the back with my knuckles. The motor immediately started spinning and by the time he came back with refreshments, Windows 95 was up and running. I emphasized the need to maintain regular backups and to purchase a good de-humidifier. I also suggested that next time he was away, he have his wife run the computer for a couple hours a day. He never pressed me as to how I got the machine running, and I thought it prudent not to offer that information.
From:Mark Householder
How about stiction? Remove the hard drive
and give it a couple of firm twists while holding it in the palm
of your hand. This will free the drive from the combination of
static and friction that has caused the problem.
Re-install the physical drive and it
should boot. Back-up the data and replace the drive ASAP.
From: 2K Designs
If you are going to replace the hard
drive, then use ghost software and copy the hard drive you want
to the other hard drive. Then once it is copied, try reinstalling
windows. That will usually copy any files that could be causing
the problem. If not, then reformat the hard drive, then reinstall
Windows. If that doesn't cure it, then you will need to do a
deltree, and erase Windows, reformat, then run windows again.
This always works for me..
From: Michael O'Quin
Listen for the disk to see if it is
spinning. If not, take the drive out of the system and rap it on
the side. Hook it back up and see if it spins. This is for an IDE
drive.
From: James D. Patton Jr.
I'd add another HDD as master and the
questionable drive as slave.
· Boot off the good drive and try accessing the bad one.
· If the bad drive is accessible then I'd install whatever O/S the user had previously on the bad drive. Once the O/S is installed, go to the bad drive to recover any data needed.
If the bad drive wasn't able to be seen
as master, then I'd try once more to access the drive using SETUP
to add the drive specs according the manufacturer.
· If this still doesn't work, then they are out of luck.
· They can pay a good chunk of change and have the data recovered from a company that deals with that sort of thing, and buy another HDD and start all over again.
P.S. I'd also put a password on the setup
to make sure that any new drives won't be changed accidentally—ssince
users never make mistakes. It's always the software or hardware
to blame.
From: Dave Cason
Use IDEINFO or equiv. to check what the
hard drive prams. were actually set to.
–P.S. Or if you're bored, swap
motherboards. Heck, a few years ago for fun we swapped platters
on Seagate ST-251 and it worked! (grin) If it's sticktion, grab
the drive & crack it! There's lots of ways you can play!
From: Tony DeVos
First we must determine if this is a
setup issue or a hard drive issue.
· Is the floppy drive properly recognized and working? Connect another hard drive to this system to verify the setup is okay.
· If the setup is working, then we must look at the hard drive itself.
· When powered up, does the drive spin?
· Does it just sit there and "click, click, click?” If it spins, it could be controller failure.
· Can you obtain another controller for this drive and swap it? Try it again.
· If the drive does not spin, it could be a symptom of "stiction.”
If it is "stiction,” you will
most likely be able to assist the drive to spin up to allow it to
boot and then backup the data. The way you help the drive
to spin up is simple.
· Remove all mounting hardware that is securing the drive to the system.
· With the drive held in your hand horizontally with both power and ribbon cables attached, turn on the system and rotate the drive with a flick of your wrist.
· Keep the drive on the same horizontal plane as you flick your wrist twisting the drive as you would spin a top to make it spin. If the problem was stiction, the drive should now be spinning and you on your way to retrieving the data.
If the drive is just sitting there "clicking,
clicking, clicking,” good luck! Please remember the only 100
percent way to keep your data safe is BACKUP, BACKUP, BACKUP. Use
the tools provided in your operating system to scandisk regularly
or obtain a disk utility program like Norton Utilities to take
the best car of your hard drive possible. However, hard drives
are sometimes like light bulbs—when you turn them on,
turning off the power may mark the last time they will ever work!
From: Karl Andrzejewski
· Boot with a Windows 98 startup disk.
· Get the CD-ROM support.
· Try reinstalling the OS. If this fails, boot to DOS, bring along my ZIP dive, fire it up in DOS Guest mode.
· Copy any critical files to the ZIP, format the hard drive.
· Reinstall the OS backup system and boot files and let the user know they should keep their sausage fingers on the TV remote and off of the computer.
From: Brad Marin
First find the disc parameters and enter
them into the bios. iI the disc is accessible at that point, I
would copy the needed files to another drive. If the FAT is
damaged I would run tiramisu and hope for the best.
From: Larry L. McNeese
I have in the past found that if you can
find another hard drive of the same make and model, you can
remove the circuit board from the dead hard drive and replace it
with the one from the good hard drive. Many times the board is
the problem, and it has saved the files and me several times. Of
course, when you get the files off you need, scrape the bad drive
and replace it with a new hard drive. I am taking in
consideration that the tech doing this knows how to properly set
up a drive—v ery important.
From: Jeff Wilson
After going through the usual hoops,
checking the BIOS setting, and booting with a boot disk.
With the current pricing on hard drives,
I don't fight with drives any more, I pull out my copy of Lost
and Found by Power Quest and let it detect the drive.
· If it does, I will then install a drive equal to or greater than the old drive as master and set the old drive as slave.
· I reboot and rerun (LF) and let it backup the drive.
· If the drive is three years or less old, then the manufacturer will cover the warranty and we are all happy. This all assumes that the new master was seen by the BIOS. This works 95 percent of the time for me—game over, other than some diagnostics.
· If not, then I would reboot with the new drive by itself and see if it is detected.
· If not, I would install an IDE card and disable the onboard IDE, reboot and run (LF). This will work 99.9 percent of the time and allows me to back up all of the data on the old drive.
With the data backed up to the new drive
and the old drive still as slave, it should now be able to boot
the system. If it boots, I would check to see if the slave is
visible. If it is, then double check to see if all the important
data was backed up.
For grins, I would now try to boot the
old drive from the IDE card. If it boots, then a possible
motherboard problem and would take some more time.
From: Bruce D. Meyer
Simple,
· Move the defunct hard drive to secondary slave, or master or whatever is unused—but don't hook the IDE cable up yet.
· (Precaution) Install a new hard drive as primary master set it to 'ACTIVE.' With fdisk, format, install Windows, power down, hook IDE cable up to the defunct HD, reboot, set BIOS to show the drive, and then copy all the files (data files only please!) over from the defunct HD to the new one. Power down, remove HD, change bios to reflect no HD there, and you’re done.
· Alternatives are using ARCO RAID IDE controllers to back the data up from one drive (Primary/defunct) to Mirror/NEW)) and then remove Arco raid (Duplidisk) and install new Hard drive as primary master.
· Also, you can use EZ Drive, GHOST, or one of several other software methods to copy or mirror the hard drive. If you have bad sectors on the original, you'll quite likely have bad data on the new drive where the bad sectors were on the old.
· If the old drive won't spin up, or can't be recognized in BIOS whatsoever, power down and up (Power completely off each time) relentlessly until is it detected (BIOS set to AUTO for that drive). You will possibly get lucky once in 30 boots.
· Once up, do your work, because it may be the last time it comes on. Also, try letting the computer cool down for several hours, remove the drive to get it out of a warm case, and let it cool down. Then try it cold.
· (Thermal deficiency may cause it to fail when hot.) In the same vein, if it is cool, then let it just sit there with power on it for thirty minutes, then just reboot for about 30 times (Don't power down.) This may work too.
Of course, let's do first things last.
· Replace your IDE cable, remove the other IDE cable from the motherboard. I have seen CD-ROMs fail that rendered sound cards, network cards, and OS’s brain-dead.
· Simply removing the CD ROM from the IDE cable was all it took to prove this point, and fix the computer. (Hey! HD is fineI—it's the CD that is tying up the IDE bus and IRQ/DMA controller!) No data loss.
I probably missed some of the better
tricks, but generally, that should solve what is solvable.
From: Joel Yalung
· Check to see if the primary hard drive ribbon is correctly attached or connected to the Motherboard and Hard drive.
· Make sure it's not loose.
· Or check the ribbon itself—make sure it still good.
· This usually solves the "invalid drive specification" and "BIOS Auto HD detection not finding the HD."
From: Troy Schlueter
Do the normal ritual of making sure power and IDE cables are tight, and changing the IDE cable.
Is the drive spinning? If not, then:
· Remove the drive and connect it back up outside the case.
· Power up the box and give the drive a quick twist to see if it will spin up.
· Try the drive on a known good working machine as a slave, if you can get it up in the cmos.
· If you still have no response, find a functioning drive that is identical (same make/model) and swap the circuit boards.
This usually does the trick, unless the
original drive has a physical error. (i.e. bad motor or platters)
Last resort—send out to a data
recovery business.
From: stan
Depends on why it's dead. On older
drives, it was quite common for the heads to stick to the platter.
It would not have the torque to start, so it couldn't work.
· Best method in that case was to put a long extension on the power cable, leave the data line off ,and with the drive between your palms, quickly rotate the drive and at the same time power on. Try both clockwise and counter clockwise. One should work if it's a "stiction" issue.
· If the drive spins and has a problem with the logic board, it's sometimes possible to swap the electronics without opening up the disk cavity, but that's a last resort.
From: Michael Wagoner
Tough question and in some aspects it
depends on what operating system the machine was running.
Obvious checks are:
· Make sure all the cables are properly and firmly attached.
· You might want to swap out the ribbon cable and/or change it to the secondary controller connection.
· Pull the power plug off it and plug in a different plug. Can you hear the hard drive spin up?
· If you (were smart enough and) brought along a different hard drive, does the machine recognize THAT hard drive? Does it spin it up? Does it start it?
Assuming all of the above is intact and
you've narrowed the problem down to that ONE particular hard
drive as having the problem (and that ONE hard drive DOES spin up),
I'll tackle it from the perspective that the machine was running
either Win95 or Win98 (the steps for both are similar).
· I would bring a startup disk from a Win98 machine to start with (make sure you have the correct startup disk type FAT 16 for machines fdisked that way FAT 32 for machines fdisked that way If the 'owner doesn't know which it was, chances are high it was FAT 16, especially on older machines).
· The reason for this is simple—it allows you to start up the machine with CD-ROM support (this is assuming that the machine has a CD-ROM). At bootup, I would access the CMOS settings and set the machine to try to recognize the hard drive automatically—once again, the next steps would depend on whether the CMOS was able to identify the hard drive or not.
· Assuming it did recognize the hard drive, I would boot the machine (without the boot disk) and check what error messages I got (if any).
· If it did not recognize the hard drive, I would try to manually input the hard drive settings (some CMOS's allow this, others make it a bit harder to do).
· Now try to boot without the boot disk.
Assuming that one of the above methods at
least got the hard drive recognized, but at boot up there is some
other error regarding the hard drive, I'd stick in the boot disk
and boot with it.
Next question is at this point can/does the machine "see" the hard drive. I've had both cases, some where it did, some where it didn't. If it sees the hard drive, can I see my information? If yes, can I access the information? Usually one of those two questions is a no.
If you can access the hard drive (the
system sees the hard drive, sees your directories) but not access
the information (when you try to enter into a directory or call
up a file you get an error message) chances are you have a messed
up FAT table.
· You can try to fdisk /mbr from your boot disk, it will re-write the FAT table.
· Now pull out the boot up disk and try to reboot again. Any luck? If so you may be in business, if not you're hosed.
I've tried, with mixed success, using
Powerquest's Lost and Found program to try to retrieve data from
a hard drive. It's hit and miss enough that it will depend on
budget and how "important" the information is before I
try to recover it. We just had a hard drive crash that we sent
out to have the information retrieved, at $125 an hour it was
expensive to recover.
Those are my solutions, for what they are
worth.
From: richarr
This has happened here several times.
· I install the new hard drive, make it a bootable partition, and install the operating system.
· Then place the old drive on the secondary disk position and copy the contents to the new drive.
· Usually into a folder called OLD DRIVE. This provides a directory tree map for where to place the files.
· Then after reinstalling all the software, original files can be placed back into the proper place on the new drive.
Very rarely does this procedure not work
for me.
From: KC Freels
· Try putting the drive in another machine. It may come up there.
· Put it in as a second drive and boot from a working drive.
· Try and access it then. Failing that, try using a program like Ghost and image the drive onto another one. If this works, you're really lucky.
· If the motor is stuck, or the drive isn't spinning right, open the top of the drive (it's dead anyway) and spin the platters using the spindle.
· Sometimes this will get the drive spinning and usable one last time.
· It will never work again though, so this is a last resort.
From: David Chambers
This is a common situation. And, it has
turned out to be a simple resolution (most of the time). I'm the
Network Manager at the San Diego Blood Bank. The non-profit
status of our organization makes purchasing new, up-to-date
equipment quite a challenge. Consequently, the largest percentage
of my 220 desktops are legacy 486/66 boxes. Their relative age
brings about hard-drive failures on a monthly basis.
I've been able to extract the data from
these drives using a boot disk, and one of two backup methods.
1. Use a portable backup tape drive that
runs from the parallel port (Trakker).
2. Use DOS Client and a boot floppy to
get the box on the LAN then map a drive with NET USE and XCOPY
the important files to the LAN.
Of course, the boot floppy method works
for about 75 percent of the failures. If the boot floppy fails, I
try using FDISK/mbr to rebuild the Master Boot Record. This is
successful 5-10 percent of the time. Since the user mentioned in
the quiz had messed around with the BIOS, it's possible the
settings are wrong and even more probable that the jumper on the
drive is misconfigured because, although the user "didn't do
anything," that new CD-ROM they installed is on the same
controller as the hard drive. The disappointing part of making a
hard drive spin back to life exists in the 10-15 percent that are
actual physical failures that will require depot level repair to
extract any data. A very expensive process.
From: Ron Masters
Hard Drive Dies.
Oh, you've got to love these kinds of
situations, don't you?
Well, this may sound strange, but it's
worked for me before. (That is, if booting off a floppy still
won't gain you access...and there are strange sounds coming from
the drive...)
1. Shut down the power and remove the
case cover to gain access to the drive. Remove the drive from the
case, but leave it connected to power and ribbon cable. (If the
ribbon connector cable isn't long enough, attach one that is.)
2. Now, hold the drive in your hands and
kick on the power (use an assistant if you'd like). As soon as
the power comes on, twist the hard drive quick and fast in your
hands. (Kind of like steering a car hard right). This sudden
"torqueing" is sometimes enough to "break" a
drive free, allowing it to spin...usually for one last time. (Have
a Zip or second drive already ready to gain access to the files.)
3. A slight variation on this (once again
with long power and ribbon cables) is to set the drive down on a
flat surface (non-conductive please!) so that it can be "spun"
while flat.
Why does this work? Well, in this
situation, my guess is that the lubrication of the drive has
failed, and the torque overcomes the initial spin-up of the drive.
From: co
· I would open the box and ensure that all of the connections are still are where they are supposed to be, including the controller card, if it has one.
· I would ask the client what operating system they were using, so that I cold make a startup from another box.
· I would try to copy the sys files to the hard drive by booting to the floppy.
· If that doesn't work, I would boot to one of the hard disk utilities available for the brand of hard drive in the client’s box (maxblast, ontrack, etc., also norton disk doctor), and get to a dos prompt, to copy the needed files.
· As a last resort, I would consult the Internet.
From: Jim Davison
The symptoms you describe would lead me
to believe that the drive lost power or died. Maybe the Molex
power connector worked loose.
I would use the following steps even
considering that you state the user had "tried" to
manually enter the settings in setup and also tried auto. The
user may not know what they are doing.
1. Try IDE Auto Detect to see if the bios
can even see the drive.
If yes, then I would use that setting and
everything should be OK.
If yes and the drive still does not boot,
I would use fdisk/mbr in case the Master boot record was
destroyed.
If no then I would go to step 2.
2. Open the box and check all power and
data cables. I have seen Molex type power connectors lose a
connection intermittently I have also seen one case where the
data cable came loose when the computer was moved.
If cables were the problem, then you
should be okay now. If you still have a problem go to step 3.
3. Remove the drive and plug it into
another computer and see if the other computer can detect the
drive.
If yes then the problem is a cable,
motherboard, etc. on the computer and needs to be replaced. If
the thing still is not working, then it is most likely a
defective drive and you will need to decide how badly you need
the data on the drive. If you need the data then I would send the
drive to a data recovery lab that can extract the data from a
dead drive and save the data to a tape, CD, HD etc. This can be
expensive but may be worth it.
From: ppotts
Boot the PC from a DOS Boot Disk. Make
sure that the boot disk has the following files on it:
FDISK.EXE
SYS.COM
1. Boot the computer and see if you can
see the drive. If you can, then COMMAND.COM may be damaged or
missing or the boot files may be corrupt. Run SYS C: to make the
hard drive again bootable.
2. If you still can't see the hard drive
then, run the following command, FDISK /MBR. The FDISK utility
updates the master boot record only if one does not exist. Even
repartitioning a hard drive with FDISK does not necessarily
rewrite this information. However, this switch allows you to
write the master boot record to the hard drive without damaging
the existing partition table information. You should not use this
command if you are using special partition software (not
partitioned with FDISK), if you have a dual-boot disk (such as NT
and Windows 95/98) or if you have more than 4 partitions on your
drive.
From:Gary Moon
You have to troubleshoot from the
hardware up:
1.
Swap the IDE cable to eliminate that as a cause. Also, check any
jumper settings, and remove any other drives from that cable.
2.
Set the drive type back to Auto. If drive ID isn't taking place,
then you can't communicate with the drive anyway.
3.
If you can't hear the platters spin up or the heads doing their
"positioning dance,” and it's a few years old, it might
have a "sticktion" problem caused by the lubricant on
the platters sticking to the heads. With the PC off, give the
hard drive a couple of sharp taps on the side with the handle of
a screwdriver! Then power it up again.
4.
If all the hardware seems to be functional, you'll have to see if
you can get at the data.
5.
Many Compaq PCs have an 8-MB system partition that launches the
system diagnostics when you press F10 (or another combination) on
boot up. See if you can access this partition. If so, your hard
drive is not completely lost.
6.
Depending on the manufacturer and model, the drive might require
a special boot-time driver to access the full capacity of the
drive. Two examples are Ontrack Disk Manager, or Maxtor's EZ-Drive.
This driver usually resides in the root directory of the system
drive or the MBR, and if it is lost, the system won't be able to
correctly see the drive partitions. On some later 486s and early
Pentiums, even though they can read the drive information into
the BIOS, they still cannot properly translate the CHS
information. This can lead you to believe that the computer can
use the full capacity of the drive, while in fact, it cannot. Try
re-installing a translation driver using original software, if
the drive came with it. This should not require any formatting of
the drive or loss of information.
7.
Run FDISK and view the partition information. If FDISK cannot
access the drive, then the hardware is still messed up, and you
need to back up a couple of steps until that is corrected.
8.
Try switching the drive into a new machine you KNOW will support
its capacity natively.
9.
If none of these steps works, and you are certain the drives
hardware is functional, then get a data recovery software such as
Tiramisu, or as a last resort, try fdisk/mbr.
From: John Bragdon
I have tried only a couple of steps on my
own:
1. If you are a "computer person"
you would have brought a bootable floppy with you. Boot off the
floppy and hopefully you can read the c: drive then.
2. Opening up the box and slapping the
hard drive can revive the hard drive if the servomotor is "frozen."
3. I have turned the data cable around
and powered on, and after about two seconds, turned the box off
and then put the cable on correctly. Powered on the box and the
system found the hard drive.
4. I have used the utility Speed Stor in
the passed to tell the CMOS about the hard drive if the CMOS
could not be read from the system. Of course you have to know the
head and sector size.
From: Lou Schweichler
This procedure assumes you do not hear
any "grinding noises" or other evidence of a physical
damage, i.e. worn-out bearings, dragging read heads, etc. If you
do, then the HDD is "toast" and you might as well offer
your customer your condolences as the HDD has just headed to the
big computer in the sky and it's cheaper these days to replace
the HDD then to repair it.
First, Check the CMOS settings and verify
they agree with those preprinted on the HDrive's Label, If not
preprinted on the label, either use a program like EZ-Drive to
obtain the correct values or remove the hard drive and connect it
to a known newer motherboard and use that board’s CMOS setup
utility to detect the proper values. Try rebooting to the C:\
prompt on the new board. If successful, reinstall the hard drive
to the original board. Then ensure the CMOS settings on the
original board agree. Adjust as necessary. Try rebooting. If the
your lucky your finished. If not try the second step.
Second, if the first step didn't solve
the problem, then the FAT Table may be corrupted. Use a utility
like EZ-Drive, which usually can be downloaded from any of the
Major HDrive OEM's Web site, to switch to a backup version of the
FAT (file allocation table). Usually there is a backup of the FAT
on the HDD, but switching to it requires the use of a HDD utility
like EZ-Drive. Follow the instructions for the Advance Options to
switch FATs, then reboot. If reboot to the C:\ prompt is
successful, AND you can access your data files, Run SCANDISK from
the DOS prompt to verify the integrity of the FAT. Then do a
cursory search of the HDD for any documents you may have recently
created. If you can get a good DIR listing of them, you're done—smoke'
em if you got em!. If not, then try third step.
Third, this step will result in the total
and absolute loss of all data on the hard drive and should only
be used as a last resort. You can use the DOS commands, "FDISK,
FORMAT C: /S", to reformat the HDD and reinstall the
operating system. Better yet, using a HDD utility like EZ-Drive
accomplishes this in about one tenth the time. Make sure you have
a bootable floppy disk that includes any special device drivers
and programs to access your peripheral equipment (like the CD-ROM)
so you can complete the OS installation. If your computer system
came with a restoration disk, you could reinstall the COMPLETE
OPERATING SYSTEM AND ALL SOFTWARE. Alternatively, once the HDD
has been reformatted and the HDD set up, you should now be able
to reinstall the complete operating system, (WIN31, WIN95, WIN98,
MAC, LINUX etc.) and all your application software from the
original distribution CDs or Disks.
From: Brett Edmonson
· First I would make sure all cables are connected and make sure it is getting power.
· Then I would check the setting in the BIOS, and make sure AUTO doesn’t work. If not, I would confirm the settings of the hard drive to the settings in the BIOS.
· Then I would see if FDISK sees the hard drive from a Win98 boot disk (which has FDISK on it).
· Then I would proceed to use the utility Hard Drive Mechanic, if it does not see it, IT IS DEAD!
From: Chris Karo
· First I would check the HD and write down all the numbers. Name of manufacturer, Model #, serial#, Hds, Sectors, landing zone, etc
· Second, I would enter into setup mode and check the settings for HD1 and or HD2, if any. Check advances settings to see if LBA or any other settings have been changed.
· If I have another PC that’s the same, I would compare all CMOS settings.
· If not, go online to the manufacturer site support and find the model. Print out all settings for the CMOS and any jumpers that may be on the drive.
· Check the power supply plug for the 5.5 (+ or -) voltage. Set the CMOS and jumpers accordingly. Boot the machine.
· If the drive still does not come up, boot to a MS-DOS 6.2 Boot disk. C: dir.
· If I can see the files and directories, I can then either slave a driveor put another master on a 2nd controller, and then copy data to the drive or to a formatted a:\disk.
From:Bryan J. Lykins
This solution comes from the "been
there, done that—multiple times.”
· First, get physical access to being able to see the disk drive and then use some type of diagnostic utility (off a boot floppy) to see if the drive is even recognized.
· If there are no lights on the controller and the diagnostics do not identify a valid drive, then you can usually recover quite easily.
· Get yourself another identical disk (with no important data on it) and swap the controllers. I have used this method to recover 3 different disks.
· If the controller lights come on and the diagnostic program recognizes your drive, but the disk is still not accessible, then most likely it is "frozen" internally. There have been several drives that have had this problem in the past. (Specifically, there were some IBM 2- and 4-GB drives, Maxtor 760 -MB, and Seagate 2 GB).
· Anyway, since we are not going to keep this troublesome drive, remove it from the machine and gently tap the side with a screwdriver.
· Put it back in and see if the motor will start the drive spinning. If it does—get the data backed up immediately and then either get rid of the disk or use it as a non-critical storage area.
· Once a drive has this problem, the solution has been known to work multiple times and the problem usually re-occurs after a reboot/shutdown sequence.
From: TJR2
Invalid drive specification.
If drive is IDE:
1) Use the CMOS IDE auto detection. Try
to use both LBA mode and normal mode. Reboot and see what (if any)
failure comes up.
2) Boot from a floppy (this is critical
that the user knows what version of OS he/she is running: 95, 95b,
98, 98b, etc.). Use FDISK after this to see if the drive is
present. If so, SYS the drive and reboot (crossing eyes, fingers,
and toes).
3) Tear into the computer and make sure
the cabling is correct. For good measure, reseat the HDD cable (both
ends) and power cable. Turn system on briefly to ensure the HDD
is spinning up.
4) Try using the secondary controller on
the motherboard (being sure to make the CMOS change as well).
5) Try a different IDE cable.
6) If none of the above steps work, it
must be 4th down and time to "punt." If the data is
irreplaceable and critical, call Onsite for a quote on data
recovery.
If drive is SCSI:
1) Use the controller utilities to see if
the card settings are correct.
Unfortunately I am not experienced in
SCSI drives and would not be able to apply anything more than
what is listed.
From: Gary Gillaspie
Depending on the operating system, I
would use a boot disk with FDISK on it. Boot the PC, and run
FDISK /MBR, which would fix the boot sector so you would then be
able to look at the hard drive after a reboot. A 2nd option is to
use the hard drive manufacturer’s disk utilities from a
floppy that MAY BE able to repair without losing data.
From: KASHIF SALIM BAWANY
Solutions:
(1) Boot computer from a bootable disk,
load CD-ROM drivers. Then run ndd's (Norton Disk Doctor) revive
option, this will revive the mbr (master boot record) and all the
data.
(2) Make the faulty drive slave drive on
a system running Win95/98. Try to backup data as much as
possible, then shutdown the system and then make the faulty drive
as primary drive and boot from a floppy drive and run fdisk.
(3) If it doesn’t work, then boot
the system with faulty drive as primary drive with a dos/windows
bootable disk, then run hard disk manager (e.g. Seagate's DM).
From: Jack Levin
The first thing I do is see if the drive
is spinning. Many times the drive just gets stuck and a small tap
will get the drive spinning again. If that is the case and the
drive does come back after some mechanical agitation, I "Ghost"
the drive to a new replacement as fast as I can.
If the drive is spinning but still not
accessible, I have had luck making it a slave drive with a known
working master. Sometimes that helps. Once I get access, I copy
as fast as I can because I know every minute is borrowed time.
When the FAT has become corrupt, I have
tried third party recovery tools with little success. If the FAT
backup is no good, I am at a loss (short of sending it out to a
data recovery service).
From: Howard Adkins
Check the parameters in the CMOS and
verify they are correct. If they are, I would attempt to boot off
of a floppy to see if I could get to the hard drive, sometimes
the MBR is bad but you can still boot to a floppy an copy the
info to disk
From: Ted Senn
Iff (If and only if) the drive doesn't
spin up, the bearings are possibly dry. In this case, I take the
drive out and give it a hard rotation and quick stop parallel
with the platters, reinstall, and get out the chicken bones. This
will sometimes allow the drive to spin up long enough to get the
data off. At the same time try to sell the owner on the idea of a
backup device.
From: Raymond V.Hall
1. Review documentation regarding the
installation—drive type, cylinder, sectors, etc.–and
identify the drive by physical inspection. Reseat all cables and
power connectors. Dust out the interior of the PC.
2. Secure current info and drivers from
manufacturers www site.
3. Use floppy disk to start the PC and
determine if drive maintenance can be performed. Is the data
available? Is the drive not booting or not operating? Scan for
viruses.
4. While virus scanning and perhaps using
scan disk, review the documentation, instructions, and Readme
files about the drive.
5. Especially with an older PC, check the
battery and replace if necessary.
6. Use setup to confirm accurate drive
settings.
7. Apply any patches, switches, jumpers
etc. noted in the current documentation.
8. Thank the user for showing patience.
From: David P. Pedersen
· First, you would give the offending computer user a short sermon about benefits of always backing up that important data.
· Second step would be to remove the offending "dead" drive from the computer.
· Third step would be to put it out of its misery with your shotgun if you have one and if not simply give it a good whack with your sledgehammer.
· Fourth step: go down to the local computer store and have them install a new one for you with backup this time! I am sure glad people call me about computer problems because, as you can see, I am one good "Repair Man.” Thanks.
From: John C. Britt Jr.
Remove the ailing drive from the box,
install it in another machine as a secondary drive, and then back
up the necessary files.
From: Kampstra Richard Contractor AMC
CSS/SAS
If there is any way you can read the disk
at all, check out Tiramisu for shareware data recovery tools that
are the best. They have a version for every type of operating
system. WinNT, FAT16, FAT32, etc. Check http://www.simtel.net/simtel.net/msdos/diskutil.html
for the software.
I have used their tools in the past to
recover data from disks. Some disks are just impossible because
the electronics on the drive have failed. In this case, the only
hope would be to swap the circuit card on the drive with a known
good one.
From: Brad Gorecki
To remedy this situation, I would verify
that the drive will still spin. If that is the case, I would use
a product called Recover 98. As long as the drive is spinning, I
can get the data off. After verifying BIOS settings and making
sure the PC will at least detect the drive, slave the new drive
off the bad one. Run this software package and transfer the data
to the drive. This software works on deleted files as well as
formatted drives. I believe this would be the easiest solution.
From: Bob Matott
One additional thought for the rare
problem—swap the circuit board from a known working
identical drive onto the bad one. Sometimes the electronics do
take a "hit.”
From: Craig Connelly
1. Check the old CMOS on board battery.
Replace if necessary.
2. Get the drive specs and go to the
manufacturer’s site and get the info on the drive.
3. Try to use a boot disk from a well-known
Utility software package.
4. Use a Data Recovery program if the
drive will spin up. Get the data off the drive.
5. Fdisk/MBR the drive and see if it will
then accept a new OS install.
6. Don't waste too much time on the issue.
Data is only as good as your last backup.
Figure out how the cost benefit of trying
to bring the drive back to life and just getting a new drive.
"Save early, Save often.”
From: Pahl Jeff TSgt AFMIA/MISO
For FAT file systems.
1st boot from floppy and try to access C:.
If that doesn't work, run Fdisk /MBR.
Sometimes replacing the master boot record will fix a non-booting
drive.
From:Matthew Harvey
Had this happen last year. Tried running
the drive as a slave in another machine (could be the controller,
you know) but that didn't do the trick. So we sent it away to a
recovery shop. They charge $100 to look at it, send you a list of
all the files they could find and recover, and then they want $1,500
to send you those files on a CD-R. We balked at the charge and
said, "No thanks, just send us back our hard drive."
They did. Of course, in order to read the disk and list the files
for us, they had to make a repair to the drive. When it was
returned to us I was able to slave it in another machine and copy
all of its contents—just finished before their jury-rigged
repair failed on us. Full data recovery for $100—not a bad
deal, huh?
From: Spike
There are many different ways to approach
this. It should depend on the O/S involved.
· In a Win95 situation, the first thing is to check the BIOS configuration and make sure that the user didn't inadvertently turn off the HDD.
· If this checks out okay, open the PC and check to make sure the cable is secure...or replace it to rule this out.
· If still no go, boot from a floppy (DOS or Win95 Startup Disk will do) and sys the drive using the sys c:\ command.
· Often this will work with Win95.
· If the drive boots (even just to a prompt) run a virus scan. Many viruses hide themselves in the boot record and will actually copy the boot record to a different part of the drive...thus, not allowing the O/S to find it. If no viruses are found...run a scandisk (from the floppy or from Safe Mode) and make sure there isn't too much corruption.
· Corruption or not...it's time to back up your important files and format the drive. This may be all that's needed to restore a drive to a functional state.
· If after the format there are still problems...trash the drive. Don't take any chances with a flaky hard drive.
· If the suspect drive is a Winnt drive...there are not a whole lot of options. Follow the steps above to the point of rebooting the system.
· In the case of NT (if it is not BIOS related), you will generally get a ntoskrnl error and the system will halt. Otherwise...the BSOD is always a possibility.
· To lessen the chances of losing all of your data, boot with a clean diskette (Dos or Win95) and run a setup from the NT floppies.
· Choose the option to repair the existing install, selecting all of the options of what to repair.
· If this works, the worst thing that will happen is you will have to reinstall your applications to re-register them in the system registry (which will be replaced).
· In the event that the drive will not boot at all, take the drive to another machine and slave it to an existing hard drive (preferably with NT as you won't see the NTFS partitions otherwise).
· Boot the second machine and see if the drive is visible from explorer...if it is...lucky you!
· Back it up pronto.
· If you cannot see the drive because it has an NTFS partition and the machine you're using is Win95...there is a utility available called NTFSDos.
· Get this...it's an invaluable resource for NT techs. It allows you to boot from a DOS floppy and see the NTFS partitions from the command prompt. You can then copy or backup necessary files prior to a re-format.
· If the drive is still dead in the water after all of this...chances are it's going to stay that way but I haven't come across too many drives I couldn't re-animate. :-)
From: Jamey Copeland
Make sure the drive's data ribbon cable
is connected securely at both the drive and the controller. If
the cable is damaged, try a new one. Enter the CMOS setup and
make sure that all the parameters entered for the drive are
correct.
Boot from a floppy disk and try accessing
the hard drive. If that is possible, then it is probably because
boot files are missing or corrupt. If that is the case, use a
third party software fix kit.
Try Sysing the c drive if it is visible
from dos.
Check the power connector.
Replace the hard drive...hehe.
From: George Rosser
· The first thing I would try would be to make a boot disk from another machine and boot up the machine and see if it can read the drive.
· If that didn't work, check the settings for the drive and the size of the drive if the user has been playing around with the system. It is possible they changed the LDA or other settings.
· If all else fails, look at the user and tell them that they just learned a lesson the hard way tell the user that they should invest in a tape backup or similar item when the new drive is purchased...
From: Milciades Marrocchi
One thing I did successfully was to
replace the HD electronics. The complete board is sometimes
standard in many models of the same brand. If the problem is
there, then chances are that you will get it to work. Replacing
the external electronics of a HD is simple.
Another one I had was a disk that would
not start spinning. We fixed it (and don't ask me why) by giving
it some hits with the tips of our fingers (while powered on). At
one point, it started spinning and we could get out its data.
From: Marco Antonio
I like to use shiramitzu. It´s a
powerful software provided (free) by ontrack (www.ontrack.com), I
found it when I had some hd´s with their boot sector erased by
Chernobyl virus and this software allowed safe backup of the
files in it.
From: Lawrence Taylor-Duncan
1. Look up manufacturer, model number etc.
on drive. At same time, check jumper settings on drive correctly
set to MASTER. If there's a slave drive check its settings, too.
2. Search for model in the Microhouse
Technical Library using your trusty laptop (call yourself a tech?
OF COURSE you have a copy of this in your arsenal...).
3. Write down manual settings from
Microhouse database (# cylinders, etc.). If you need jumper
settings above, they're there too! If no Microhouse Library
available, try manufacturer's Web site, (this all assuming this
setup data is not stamped on drive).
4. Enter data in CMOS
5. Save and re-boot.
Time to completio–n—10-15
minutes.
IF NO SUCCESS
6. Check CMOS to insure on-board
controller not disabled. Disconnect slave. Check ribbon cable is
not bad. Check ribbon cable is in correct IDE slot. Check that
IRQ 14 has not been used for manually setting another peripheral
(if so, reclaim IRQ for controller).
IF NO SUCCESS
7. Controller may be bad. Install drive
in alternate computer with good controller to test, or try 2nd
controller slot using IRQ 15.
IF NO SUCCESS
8. Boot sector or partition table
possibly bad in drive. Could use Norton Utility to debug if you
like living dangerously. Other alternatives include sending drive
to OnTrack for data recovery (expensive), or re-FDISK and start
all over (free, but data gone).
From: Curtis Coons
Run Norton's recovery disks. This is done
from DOS.
From: Mike Metcalfe
The process of restoring a drive is
fairly straightforward. It relies on just a few facts:
1. The drive data is in BIOS correctly.
2. The data cable is in good condition.
3. The IDE port on the main board is
functioning.
4. The drive powers on, i.e. you can hear
it spin up.
Having been a field engineer for a number
of years, this is one of the worst situations we face. The
customer is frantic about the possibility of losing some or all
of his data. He never thought that this would (or could) happen
to him. He has made no effort to back up his data but now wants
you to perform some magic that will save the day (and his data).
Onsite retrieval of data is at best a
risk that poses undesirable consequences for both the customer
and the technician. Your first action is to be as honest with the
customer as you can be. Tell him in no uncertain terms that you
may not be able to save anything. This does two things: first it
allows the customer to prepare himself for the worst outcome (no
data), and secondly it allows you to proceed with more confidence
in that you are not going to be held responsible for the data
that was (or still may be) on the hard drive.
The technical stuff is basic. You should
be carrying with you a working boot disk. I like to use my
Windows 95/98 setup disk, the one that gives me several options
on how to proceed after the initial boot process. I first look at
the drive (physically) and get as much information off of the
case as I can. Usually it will include how many cylinders, heads
and sectors the drive has. I then go to Setup and input this
information in the BIOS. Saving that information I boot to my
trusty boot disk and hopefully get an
A: prompt.
Using Fdisk I look at the drive and see
if it still has a DOS partition. If it does then I switch to the
C: prompt (if it comes up, I then breath a sigh of relief) and
look at the directory tree. This only means that I can see the
FAT (File Allocation Table), I still may not be able to actually
get data off of the drive. Remember that while you are working in
DOS, your file names are in the 8.3 format and any information
transferred in that environment will be rendered difficult if not
impossible to use. So let’s say that we have been blessed
with a good Directory Tree and we can see the desired information
buried somewhere on the platters. Knowing I will most certainly
replace the drive, I need to attempt to get the data off of it in
its most usable form, which will be in a Windows long filename
format.
At this point, I'm excited enough about
becoming the local computer hero that I pull the drive out and
hook it up as a secondary drive to a working system. I then boot
the second system and see if it will recognize the drive. It
does, and I happily transfer the data to a directory on a good
drive where I can either burn a CD for the customer or restore it
to the new drive when it becomes available.
If you have no second drive available to
install the failing disk drive into you are now going to have to
make a tough decision. This premise is far too vague for actual
fieldwork but we will say that the customer has no idea where his
data resides on the drive (the usual case). Being familiar with
the 8.3 format you then ask him what the last 3 letters of the
filename was. He states .doc or .wpd or some other format. You do
a file search such as "dir *.wpd/s" which will then
search the drive and its subdirectories for the data. You then
can move the data off of the drive to a floppy and even though
you may have to rename all of the files back to whatever they
were originally named, you have the praise and honor of being the
guru of the moment.
At best you can hope to get some data for
the customer, at worst you now have a working knowledge of the
system and its integrity (i.e. controllers, peripheral cards, etc.)
You also have the opportunity to discuss valid backup options
with the customer. But that is another story.
From: Joe Blackledge
Recently I had a machine that would lock
up at various times. This was a critical PC attached to a piece
of measuring equipment. There was a lot of time invested in
writing the measurement programs stored on the hard drive. Of
course, the programs were not backed up.
I discovered that if it was cold (had
been off for some time), it would run for about 10 minutes. To
make a long story short, it was a heat-related problem with the
hard drive. The warmer the machine got, the shorter the period of
time the hard drive would work.
I opened the case up, took the hard drive
out, stretched the cables out and replugged them so the drive was
outside the machine. I found two large zip-lock bags and filled
them with ice. I laid the drive on one of them and placed the
other on top. I waited about 30 minutes for it to get real cool.
I connected a zip drive to the parallel port and booted the
machine. I had plenty of time to make a complete backup to the
zip disks. I actually let it run for a couple more hours just to
see if it would keep working. When I shut it down, it was still
working fine. I installed a new hard drive, restored the data
from the zip disks and made a lot of people happy.
From: cpruszko
1. Try the "auto" settings in
the BIOS again
2. If that does not work, use a DOS
formatted boot disk, boot the system to the a: drive, type "C:"
to see if you can access the hard drive. If this works, back up
valuable files then re-install Windows.
3. If that does not work, you can take
off the cover and reseat the cables and try again.
4. If that does not work, you will have
to go to a third party utility or reformat the drive and re-install
Windows.
From: Joe Dougherty
The quiz scenario didn't mention the
operating system in use, so I'll assume the user has Windows 95/98
installed on the system.
One simple and valuable tool to have up
front is some kind of boot disk, either a Windows startup boot
disk from the original software package, or a recent DOS boot or
setup disk. I keep a set of DOS 6.22 setup diskettes in my
toolkit, since the first disk has an extremely important tool:
fdisk. (We
run a completely NT shop at my company.)
My first inclination would be to open the
system and peek at the cabling. PC ribbon cables are notorious
for wiggling free from drive connectors, or, even worse, not
being installed securely in the first place. Even the mild
vibrations from a power supply fan or even moving a CPU case just
a few feet could possibly work the cable off the connector enough
to give errors. Eliminate that right off the bat.
The next thing to do would be to reboot
the system, get into the CMOS or BIOS settings, and reset the
BIOS for an automatic setup of the drive (this also assumes IDE
drives). Many modern BIOS setups have a utility that scans and
sets IDE drive settings. This would be helpful to get the
hardware synched up properly. Make sure the system correctly
detects the drive. This should be apparent on the information
screens that appear when the system reboots.
If the hardware still can't detect the
operating system, one of two things might be wrong. Either the
Master Boot Record on the hard disk is corrupt or damaged, or the
system is attempting to boot to a partition that isn't bootable.
This is where fdisk helps (no matter what operating system you
use).
At this point, I would reboot the system
using the DOS boot diskette. The Microsoft DOS 6.X setup diskette
allows you to boot to the first setup screen, then press F3 to
exit to a prompt. Fdisk is located on that first setup diskette.
From the A: prompt, start fdisk and have a look at what the
current partition settings are.
The first thing to look for is to see if
there are multiple partitions, and if so, which one is active. If
the C: partition is not labeled active, use fdisk to set it to
active and try rebooting.
If that fails, the Master Boot Record on
the boot partition may be corrupted. Reboot to the DOS diskette,
and at the A: prompt, invoke the fdisk command using the /MBR
switch. This won't start fdisk, but it will rewrite the Master
Boot Record and may allow you to boot the system back to the hard
disk partition. I've done this a number of times on systems
running Windows 95/98, Windows NT, Linux, and OS/2.
From: edward.fearon
So your hard drive has failed, eh?
And it’s got that all important
invoice/CV/document that you cannot afford to lose...
"It was working last time I used it"
and "I never touched it" drift into the conversation.
In the case when a HD has failed, it can
be due to a number of factors (so many that I wont indulge you).
However, one that I find that regularly is the fact that the
drive will not spin up (listen for spin up and spin down sounds).
This can be a common problem particularly after a cold spell, or
after a weekend when the machine has been stuck in your spare
room in the cold. I have it on good authority that often this is
caused by the lubricants on the spindles getting thicker due to a
temp drop... and the HD motor not having enough inertia to
overcome the (now thicker) lube.
Well, you may just be able to recover
most of the HD, or perhaps even just that one file if you...
1) Take out the hard disk of the System
Unit... get your local Techie Guru to do it for you if you aren't
happy…
2) And give it gentle twists along its
horizontal axis.
3) Plug it in and try again... if it
works, go to step 9 ASAP.
4) Switch on the monitor.
5) Rest the HD on the top back end of the
monitor (forget it if you have a TFT!), where the HD will gently
warm up over the next 4-8 hours.
6) Put that disk back into the machine
while it’s hot/warm.
7) Cross your fingers.
8) Switch on the power.
9) If it works start ripping off the data
as fast as you possibly can, if not put it on a radiator, and
leave for a while (then go to step 3).
10) If under warranty send it off, or if
not buy a new one!
And if that fails...
PANIC!
Or call a professional Hard Drive
Recovery Service!!!
From: Dan Calloway
I would take the following approach when
trying to revive a hard drive that doesn't boot up and where
there is no startup disk that had previously been made: There are
really three different tasks involved here. (1) To get your data
off the hard disk; (2) you must make the disk hardware respond to
the system; and (3) you may want to make the disk bootable again
and perhaps keep it in service. Here are the steps involved:
(1) Boot from the floppy drive with
whatever drivers and system files your system uses, then try to
read drive C. The first and most important piece of data on the
hard disk is the MBR and the partition table. There are a number
of programs that will read an MBR. One such program is a DOS
program called Fdisk. Norton Utilities is another.
(2) If you can read drive C, backup the
contents of the disk and then either reformat the disk and reload
the data. If you can't read see drive C, then start Fdisk or some
other MBR reader to see if the system acknowledges the existence
of the hard drive.
(3) If the drive isn't recognized, then
check for loose connections and check the drive's configuration
in CMOS. Is the drive too hot or cold? Is it spinning at all?
Remove and reseat the controller. A controller swap might
possibly make the drive respond where it wouldn't before.
(4) If drive C is recognized, then
examine the partition table located in the MBR with Fdisk or
Norton Utilities, to see if the partitions are well-defined (they
should be for a drive that worked previously).
(5) If the partitions don't exist on the
MBR, then the response is to rebuild or restore the data to the
disk. You may have to rebuild the MBR from a previously backed up
copy of it or, if you haven't backed up the MBR, steal an
identical MBR from another PC by backing up the MBR from a
working machine onto a floppy diskette and restore the MBR of the
troubled PC.
(6) Reformat the first track of the disk
with an autoconfigure controller. If you can low-level format the
disk, then use HDTEST or some other selective low-level formatter
to reformat the first track. If this doesn't work, then there is
probably a physical problem with the drive at cylinder 0 head 0.
Take another hard drive with identical characteristics and
partition layout and boot from it. Then park the good drive,
disconnect the power leads from it before disconnecting the data
cables, connect the bad drive up to the system via power and data
cables and unpark it.
(7) Next finish up by examining the DBR
or DOS boot record. This is the first sector in the DOS partition.
It contains a small program that loads the hidden files and boots
the operating system. You can repair the DBR by further examining
the data structure inside the DBR called the BIOS Parameter Block
or DPB. It describes the disk, how many FATs are on the disk, how
large the clusters are, what the total number of sectors on the
disk are, and so on. You can reconstruct the DPB from a program
called DISKLOOK or Norton Disk Doctor. You can write the good
data from a working disk to the non-working disk using these
utilities to revive the drive.
(8) Once the data has been extracted from
the drive, throw the bad hard drive away.
From: Frank Luna
Upon reading the error, this appears not
to be an issue with the drive but the controller or the logic in
the auto drive setup. If so, this should work.
Place the drive in a different machine
and check all jumpers. Boot from a floppy disk and pray that a
drive overlay (disk manager, Ontrack, EZdrive) was not used to
setup the drive.
From: C.K. Smith
This is not an easy one to answer. All of
it can depend on the problem at hand (what type of hard drive)
and the error messages received. Sometimes, certain brands of
hard drives (such as Compaq and CTX) have no "raising the
dead". If there is no internal clock, and the hard drive
doesn't realize it is there ... well ... except for replacing the
CMOS chip, say "ADIOS"!
From: Steven Troester
A lot of time a drive failure is not the
physical drive, but the drive's circuit board. I've successfully
revived dead drives by finding (sometimes purchasing) an
identical drive and carefully swapping the circuit boards.
From: marian1
The situation you suggest best describes
inability of BIOS to determine the type of your primary hard
drive. Its parameters can be determined from the h/d
manufacturer's sticker and entered manually in SETUP under USER
or MANUAL entry, depending on your BIOS. The parameters can also
be downloaded from Technical Support site of the manufacturer as
pdf file and read using Acrobat.
From: Jim Augherton
I would go into setup and make sure that
the hard drive is configured properly. Already had it happen.
From: Tim Payne
Sometimes you need to run a check on a
disk but you can't get it to load NT to run it. For example, you
get an inaccessible boot device. One way to run the check is as
follows:
· Take a set of Windows NT Setup Boot floppies and begin a new install.
· If you don't have a set of boot floppies, you can make a set from the Windows NT CD. Run Winnt32/ox from the i386 directory.
· Do not upgrade but choose 'N' for a new install. When prompted for a directory name, choose WINNT2 by simply adding a '2' to the suggested location, which is the current location of your crashed NT. Choose
· "Leave the Current File System intact" when given the partition choices.
By installing to the same partition you
will be given the chance to do a complete scan. Do the thorough
scan and when it's complete, you will see a message that
indicates that changes were made and to press 'F8' to restart
your computer and begin the setup.
Remove your floppy and/or your CD-ROM.
When your machine reboots you will see your familiar boot menu
and the process continuing normally. What's left is to log in to
your regular installation. There will be no WINNT2 directory or
changes to your boot.ini but simply your repaired NT installation.
If this does not work, or CHKDSK cannot be run the MFT may be
corrupt. Here is the solution to that one.
1. If you have a second boot of NT on
another partition you may be able to boot into this to do the
repair. Otherwise mount the disk on separate system running
Windows NT, assigning it a known drive letter.
2. Execute Dskprobe.exe from the NT4
resource kit.
3. From the Drives menu, select Logical
Volume.
4. From within the 'Open Logical Volume'
window, double click on the drive letter of the corrupted volume.
5. Remove the check from 'Read Only'
check box and select the 'Set Active' button. This establishes a
handle to this volume.
NTFS maintains an exact copy of the first
records of the MFT in the MFT mirror. The next few steps copy the
first four records from the MFT mirror to the MFT, fixing the MFT.
6. Select 'Read' from the 'Sectors' menu.
7. In the 'Read Sectors' window, if
'Starting Sectors' does not already read "0", type in
the number "0" and select the 'Read' button.
8. Select 'NTFS BootSector' from the View
menu.
9. From within the NTFS information
window, select the 'Go' button next to 'Clusters to MFT' field.
The Sector "X" for 1 that is displayed in the Title Bar
is the cluster number that begins the MFT, WRITE THAT "X"
NUMBER DOWN.
10. Once again repeat 6 and 7 to return
to the BootSector 11. Next, from within the NTFS information
window, select the 'Go' button next to 'Clusters to MFT Mirr'
field.
You have just selected the spot where the
copy of the first few records of the MFT exists, you will copy
and paste from here:
11. Select 'Read' from the Sectors menu.
12. In the Read Sectors window, type
"8" in the Number of Sectors field and select the
'Read' button. (We are gathering the sectors to write into the
original MFT location.) What we're trying to get is 4 1024-byte
MFT records, and that means 8 512-byte sectors.
13. Select 'Write' from the Sectors menu.
14. Type in the "X" number that
you WROTE DOWN above into the starting sector to write data field
and select the Write It button, reply to the message: Are you
sure you want to permanently overwrite the data in... with the
Yes button.
15. Quit Disk Probe.
16. Open Disk Administrator, select the
partition you just fixed.
17. Right click and select 'Assign Drive
Letter.’
18. Select Do Not Assign A Drive Letter
radio button and select OK, selecting Yes in the Confirm window
that appears. This dismounts the partition.
19. Do steps 17 and 18 again, but this
time re-assigning the drive letter. This re-mounts the partition.
You should no longer get a message box indicating the drive is
broken at this point. If you do, then some part of this rescue
process went wrong.
20. Run chkdsk X: /f from the Command
Prompt. If you get errors fixed, run chkdsk X: /f again and again
until no errors are found and reported fixed.
From: Thomas W Lawrence
· First replace the IDE cable to your hard drive
· If that don't work, second, you could make this drive a slave install a new hard drive and try copying the drive to the new drive or…
· One could access the drive by using Western Digital E-Z Bios. This disk comes with most Western Digital hard drives and comes with a software program to copy the one hard drive to the other.
· You could install a new drive and using the software from this disk, copy the entire drive to the new drive.
· I have done this several times and it worked.
From: rob.hardman
I have used the following techniques very
successfully for a number of years:
1. Put the hard drive in the fridge for
about 1 hour. Sounds crazy, but this works if the drive suffering
from a heat-related problem.
2. Get hold of an identical working
drive, make, and model. Swap the PCB from the working drive to
the faulty one. If the PCB was the problem, the faulty drive will
now be accessible again.
3. If the PCB was not the problem, then
the HDA is. Chances are if it is not accessible, then the boot
sector/partition info has been trashed. You can use Norton Disk
Doctor to directly edit and repair these areas. Having done this,
you can use Disk Clone or Norton Ghost (with ignore errors switch)
to then selectively copy the readable sectors off to another disk.
4. If all the above fails, the drive has
probably suffered a head crash and the heads or the disk platters
are physically damaged. In this case, you need to engage a
specialist data recovery service. They will remanufacture the
drive by replacing the damaged parts and recovering the readable
sectors off the damaged platters.
From: David Forster
· The first thing is to find out what was the last thing the client was doing before the crash.
· Sometimes, the clue gives a starting point.
· The next is to suspect a virus and boot with a clean disk from my arsenal. If no virus is found, then check the drive parameters to be sure they are correct in the CMOS.
· Then boot to the A drive with fdisk on it, run "fdisk /mbr to reset the "master boot record" onto the drive. If the drive was set up with EZ or Ontrack, then possibly their utility could be used to bring back the drive.
· Also, most manufacturers have good diagnostic programs available at their respective Web sites. I.E.; MUD from Maxtor; Wdiag from Western Digital, etc. Third party vendors also have various utilities to bring back a drive; Symantec (Norton), and Ontrack, to name a couple.
From: tal
1. I will enter into the machine BIOS and
see whether it will identify the HD. If not, I will open the
machine and look to see if the data cord is connected and the
power supply is connected and give them a little push again (sometimes
it misplaces)
2. Then I will try again to reboot it and
check again within the BIOS (if it will not work or the user
tried to install a new hard drive when it happened, I will look
at the SCSI termination if this is a SCSI HD. If it is a EIDE, I
will look at the jumpers settings of the EIDE drives because some
HD will not work with the jumper sets as primary with other
drives on the same channel [primary or secondary] so the jumper
should go out). Then again I will reboot the machine and if it
will not work or be recognized inside the BIOS, my last resort
will be to take out the drive plant it in a different machine and
see if the 2nd machine will work with it.
From: Sami.Hanninen
Hello, here's my suggestion:
1. Diagnose if the fault is in the drive
or in the machine by plugging the drive to another computer (preferably
identical). If you don't have one, go to a computer store and ask
them to try it out.
2. If the fault is in the drive, try
changing the controller to identical one (from an identical disk)–—that
is sometimes possible, sometimes no–t—be careful in
this step. With controller, I mean the controller in the bottom
of the drive, not the computer's.
3. If that didn't help, plug the drive to
a computer which recognizes the parameters of the drive correctly
and try a disk reviving tool like Norton Disk doctor (if your
partitions are format that it understands) or some other that
understands your partition format.
4. If the partitions do not exist
anymore, at least not visibly to the computer and nothing else
helps, it's best to send your drive to a company that restores
your data—if it's important enough. Because this kind of
restoring costs a lot.
From: Anirudh Singhania
The data cable connected to your hard
disk is not functioning properly, or your hard disk has crashed.
The only circumstance when the computer cannot detect your hdd
from the bios setup very directly means hdd failure or data cable
failure.
From: Adil M. Niazy [adil_niazy
If the PC can't detect the hard disk type
from the setup, then we definitely have a hardware problem. Any
of the following may solve the problem.
1. Open the case and check that the power
and controller cables are connected properly.
2. Try a working hard disk to test that
the controller, cable, and power are okay.
3. If you have a similar working hard
disk, try changing the PCB (IDE board) on the back of the hard
disk with working one.
From: James Fylan
Whenever I've come across a drive that's
got that funky dying tick-tick rhythm on power up, I call upon
the ancient and mystical powers of gumbyism and smack it
repeatedly about the upper housing with a blunt object. It may be
dumb but if the drive is caught early enough, the 'gumby mallet
of might' will often give you enough time to whip that data off....
From:Meng Ling Lee
I will try the following:
1. Disconnect disk drive and reconnect
again.
2. Make sure the disk connection and the
power are connected properly.
3. Check the jumper setting on the disk
drive and the disk controller.
4. Access Setup and run 'Auto Detect' to
detect the disk drive type.
5. Listen to the disk drive when it is
booting.
6. Notice the disk drive LED when it is
booting.
7. Boot from floppy disk and run 'FDISK'
to display the disk drive capacity.
8. Make sure the disk drive is the
primary and set "Active.”
9. If the file system is FAT32, try to
display the content of the drive by type in “DIR C:”
10. Try to transfer system to the disk
drive by type in ”SYS C:”
11. Move the disk drive other machine,
and repeat steps 1-10.
12. Repeat steps 1-10 with other working
disk drive to confirm the problem.
From: Walt Lonnborg
First, check to see if a nonboot floppy
was left in drive A: The CMOS may be set to read the floppy drive
first and will give an error trying to read a nonboot floppy.
Check controller cable connections and
power cable connections. Check to see if the power cable is loose
or the flat ribbon controller cable is loose at the drive or the
controller/motherboard connection.
Check to make sure the cable red line
side is plugged to pin 1 at the Hard Drive and the controller/motherboard.
Check the jumpers on all drives for
master/slave settings.
Turn on the computer. Hit the Del or
other key combination to get into the CMOS setup utility. Make
note of the Standard settings for the drives. Verify them with
the settings required for the drive. You may autodetect the drive
if there are no settings for it. Older computers require you set
these settings manually.
Reboot the machine and check the settings.
If the BIOS has lost these settings you need to replace the
motherboard battery.
If it autodetects the drive, try a reboot.
If you can read the drive backup everything you can. You can
backup files from a DOS prompt. You don't have to get Windows
running to backup essential data.
If the reboot doesn't work: Set the CMOS
to boot from an appropriate operating system diskette A: or CD
and reboot.
If you can read the drive backup
everything you can. Use fdisk /mbr to rebuild the boot record.
Try to reboot. If reboot still doesn't work, reinstall the
operating system.
From:Ian Steele
A common problem with incorrect CMOS
settings is that the C: drive will not boot. Providing the CMOS
settings are valid (that is that they do not specify a bigger
drive then what the drive is), then the system should be able to
see the drive if you are booting from a diskette.
If you can see the drive from a diskette,
then you are very close to recovery. Adding another hard drive
and xcopying the data will save the data. You can then set the
old drive specs to AUTO in the CMOS and then run FDISK/Format and
restore the drive. It is a good idea to reboot off the C: drive
when you have formatted the drive to verify that the drive is
okay—it should be if the original problem was a loss of CMOS
settings.
If the C: drive was a NTFS partition then
of course the booting off the diskette will not see the drive. In
this case using a shareware program NTSF4DOS or something like
that will allow you to read the drive and copy it to another
drive.
From: Eric Springler
These are some of the things that I would
do...
a) Check the cmos settings to be sure
that they are correct for the drive.
b) Ask if the user wrote to the disk
while the cmos settings were wrong. If they were, then try and
use those settings to retrieve some of the data. Sometimes data
can be written to the disk and retrieved even if the cmos
settings are incorrect.
c) Boot off of a floppy disk with a
recent virus scanner. It could be a simple virus.
d) If it's just a case of the disk not
being bootable, do and FDISK /MBR to the drive, or do a SYS C:
off of a different Win98/95 boot disk. If it's NT, do a repair of
boot/system files. It asks for a repair disk, but you can use any
old repair disc for that.
e) Stick the drive in another Win9X box (if
it was a fat16/32 drive) and run norton disk doctor (tm) on it.
Sometimes Norton will recover enough of the directory listings
for you to retrieve some of the data
f) If none of these work, put 3 hard
drives in a machine: 1) NT Workstation (or 95), 2) Bad Drive, 3)
exact model and size drive as the bad drive. Format drive 3, and
do a sector-by-sector copy of 2 onto 3 with something like
Diskprobe.
g) Put the drive in a working Windows NT
machine and drive RecoverNT.
That's about all that I can think of
right now.
From: Gary Stevens
Welcome to the wonderful of crashed
computers.
To revive or attempt to revive a failed
hard drive I would recommend the following steps:
1. Ascertain what the user was doing
before it stopped.
2. Ask what they did to try and fix it.
3. Check the CMOS settings. Battery may
have failed thereby dropping the configuration.
4. Boot from a GOOD floppy at DOS level,
if possible. If it boots, see what is available on the hard drive
with a NO CHANGE examination.
5. Check the files, if available, with a
NO CHANGE integrity disk process, like Norton’s.
6. If data can be recovered then do so
before taking any other steps.
I would then clone or copy the hard drive
contents to another drive or location.
7. Remove the hard drive and test in
another computer to confirm it is not a general I/O communication
failure.
8. Rebuild the system based on diagnosis.
If all else fails, then take it to
someone who really knows what they’re doing, sit down in the
sun, and enjoy a Budwiser.
From: Jerry Pacheco
· Check to see if the drive spins up; if not, replace drive.
· If drive spins up, check cmos settings.
· If cmos settings are okay, check fdisk to see if partition is still accessible.
· If fdisk doesn’t show partition, create partition and format drive (importance of backing up data).
· If fdisk shows partition, check to see if you can access drive from prompt.
· If you can access drive, run sys.com to make drive bootable. Reboot from drive.
· If you can't access drive, run scandisk or norton utilities from floppy.
· If scandisk or norton fixes problem, reboot from drive.
· If scandisk or norton doesn't find errors, re-partition and reformat drive.
· If you encounter errors while formatting the drive, replace drive.
From: ICAN WORKS
THESE TRICKS HAVE WORKED FOR ME SEVERAL
TIMES WHEN CMOS LOST THE C DRIVE OR COULD NOT READ IT
INVALID DRIVE SPECIFICATION
(1) POWER OFF.
(2) DISCONNECT C DRIVE.
(3) POWER ON, DISABLE OR REMOVE ALL FIXED
HARD DRIVES IN CMOS
RUN AUTO DETECT, (NONE DETECTED)
GOOD!
(4) SHUT DOWN, RECONNECT HARD DRIVE,
REBOOT.
IF C DRIVE TEST ON BOOT MENU DOES NOT
APPEAR ENTER SETUP, RUN AUTO DETECT, THIS TRICK USUALLY WORKS ON
THE 386 & 486 MODELS.
UTILITIES ON FLOPPY
THIS TRICK WAS AN ACCIDENT AFTER A LONG
DAY, BUT IT WORKED (NOTE THIS METHOD WAS ONLY EVER USED AND
TESTED ON 486S) IN FRUSTRATION OF TRYING TO FIND THAT DARN HARD
DRIVE, I DUG OUT A BRAND NEW DATA CABLE, INSTALLED THE CABLE AND
REBOOTED.
C DRIVE ERRORS ALL OVER THE BOOT SCREEN,
WHEN I INVESTIGATED MY HANDIWORK I HAD DISCOVERED MY ERROR AS I
HAD REVERSED DATA CABLE AT THE IDE SLOT. I QUICKLY CORRECTED THE
MISTAKE AND REBOOTED THINKING “NOW I REALLY DID IT????”
THE SYSTEM REBOOTED FINE, RAN SCANDISK,
ALL SYSTEMS OKAY. OS BOOTED UP GREAT.
JUST AN HOUR OR SO AGO, A TECH GURU TOLD
ME OF HIS SIMPLE METHOD. I HAVE NOT TESTED THIS ONE YET. HE SAYS
REMOVE DATA CABLE FROM HARD DRIVE, RUN FINE SCREWDRIVER OVER
CONTACTS OF HARD DRIVE TO SHORT OUT OR, AS HE SAYS, DISCHARGE THE
COMPONENT, RECONNECT, REBOOT, AND IT SHOULD WORK. WELL IF IT
DOESN’T, IT WAS GOING INTO THE GARBAGE ANYWAY.
From: Doug Carpenter
1. Check the CMOS battery, your problem
may be simple. It could also be an intermittent short on the
system board or a failing battery. It holds the system info until
you shut down, maybe for as long as five minutes, then fails.
What's the clock say?
2. Make sure a disk manager isn't
installed on the drive. If that's at least a possibility (greater
than 2.1GB on old 486 computer?), try using the usual drive
parameters for a disk manager: 1024, 16, 63
3. Maybe the master boot record was lost.
Try fdisk/mbr. Make sure you’re using the correct operating
system version.
4. Boot from a clean floppy and try to
change to C: If you can see the drive, you may have a virus.
5. Can you hear the drive spinning up?
Can you see a hard drive access LED visibly working? Maybe it's
spinning up slowly, press pause or reset to allow time for the
hard drive to get up to speed, see if the problem disappears.
6. Check for a bad cable connection or
power connection. They should be seated firmly. Are they oriented
correctly? Maybe someone else worked on the machine. Is the
ribbon cable made for cable select? Is it set that way? Check the
jumpers.
7. If all else fails, put another drive
in and see if it works okay.
8. If you get it running, check for
viruses just for fun.
From: Letehumy Rajavalu, GSSB
Reboot the PC, get to the CMOS setup and
set the drive type to "auto" again to confirm if the
hard disk is detected.
Else, get back to the CMOS setup again
and try to set the correct drive type based on the capacity of
the hard disk which can be found on the hard disk itself if you
open up the CPU casing.
From: Brent Hunter
Very simple, I think?!
While the drive is running, you should be
able to get all the information off the drive, unless it has
"bad sectors, etc."
My usual task list involves using "GHOST"
to get the data of the hard drive. But sometimes this doesn't
work, because of bad sectors, or the drive timing out while
trying to sort itself out. My next solution is to use XCOPY32
under a Windows 98 dos prompt. This enables you to use more and
interesting switches. Ninety-nine percent of the time, this gets
the data off a failing drive.
My syntax is a follows:
XCOPY32 x:\*.* y:\ /E /H /C
x: = source drive (i.e. failing drive)
y: = target drive
/E = copies all directories and
subdirectories including empty ones.
/H = copies hidden and system files (i.e.
SYSTEM.DAT & USER.DAT are Windows registry files with the
Hidden and System attributes).
/C = this switch is the trick. Even if
the drive times out and then starts up again, XCOPY32 will
continue copying the data over.
From: Skip Berryhill
You didn't say, but often, when a hard
drive won't boot, you can boot on a floppy disc with FDISK on it,
log onto the hard drive, and execute some commands (DIR, COPY,
and the like).
If they work okay, you can use the
following from the floppy: FDISK /MBR and re-write the Master
Boot Record of the physical drive.
Next, remove the floppy and reboot. It
will usually be alright. If it operates properly, all it means is
that the MBR was somehow corrupted. Nothing majo–r—it
was re-written by the FDISK /MBR command.
The /MBR switch was undocumented for a
long time.
From: Phil Adams
· Get the new hard drive and setup as the master the old drive as the slave.
· After running scandisk, you should be able to xcopy everything to the new drive.
· Worse case, install the OS to the new drive then copy the user files over.
From: Robert P Mulhearn, Jr
Use Steve Gibson's spinrite on a
quarterly basis to keep track of HD condition and recover bad
drives as long as they are recognized by OS.
From: Kevin Flateau
First of all, is the drive alive?
When you turn on the machine shortly after a quick ticking noise (watch the memory count on the screen), then you'll hear the floppy do a quick click and the light on the front will go on, then you'll hear some short clicking from the hard drive and its name will appear on the screen. If you don't hear anything and the period after the floppy and before the notification of hard disk failure is more than 20-30 seconds, then your drive has most likely run out of gas. If it did make a noise (hum type) odds are the drive is still alive so let's try to wake it up.
This is my methodology for firing that
sucker up to breathing again.
1. Identify the drive and its parameters.
You'll probably need to take it out of the case. On the outside
is a label with a model number, cylinders, heads, sectors, and
landing zone (usually not necessary). The model number may be
necessary to seek out the parameters of the drive if they are not
readily available. The PC Pocket reference manual has an
extensive list of older drives. Newer drives are labeled with
specs.
2. With the parameters in hand, boot the
machine and enter the bios. Go to the Drive 0 settings and enter
the cylinders, heads, and sectors in there appropriate areas.
3. Hit escape, F10, and answer "Y"
to the “Save?” question.
From: Shadow
THE SITUATION:
You get a call from a user at work, a
consulting client, or a neighbor who's found out you're "a
computer person." (Sometimes they all call on the same day,
don't they?)
Maybe you're lucky. When you get there,
the machine boots just fine. The user says, "That computer
doesn't like me." You tell the user to back up important
files while the system is running because you're going to order a
new hard drive so this doesn't happen again.
But then there are the times you aren't
lucky. You get messages like "disk 0 error" and "invalid
drive specification." I recently got those errors trying to
revive the hard drive of a Compaq Prolinea 4/66.
It doesn't matter what the box is, though.
The circumstances are all too familiar:
The data isn't backed up.
The problem came out of nowhere.
The user had accessed Setup and tried to
manually enter the settings for the drive type when "Auto"
didn't work.
There was no startup disk made by this
machine.
Reviving a drive like this one—even
if only long enough to copy its data before you put it in File 13—is
a tough challenge. How would you approach it?
THE SOLUTION:
Before going on-site I would be sure to
have my various boot disks available (DOS6.22, Win9x, WinNT and
AntiVirus) containing the usual disk and file utilities, a spare
hard drive and a small hammer.
When I arrive on-site, I would first
reset the CMOS settings to factory default. There can sometimes
be corruption of the CMOS and can cause drives to seem to have
"failed". Then I would go over the CMOS settings and
make the appropriate changes for that particular system,
including setting the primary HD to AUTO. If this fails, then I
would boot to floppy and determine if FDISK can see the drive. If
not, then it’s time to open the case. With the PC turned
off, I would first check the drive cables to verify a solid
connection to both power and data cables,and install my spare
drive (to save data with). With the case still open, I would
power-on the machine and listen carefully for the drive to spin
up. If I cannot hear the drive spinning up, then I would remove
the drive (with power off of course). Then with the drive in my
hand and still connected, I would power up the PC again, feeling
for the centrifugal force the drive would create from the
spinning platters. If there is no torsion effect felt, then this
would mean that the platters are not spinning and that the heads
may be '”stuck.”
This is where the hammer comes in. Power
up the PC again and LIGHTLY tap the drive case edge once or twice
with the hammer handle. This will usually unstick the heads from
the platter and allow me to copy the data (or whole drive
depending on the situation) to the spare drive for safekeeping
until the user can purchase a new drive.
If this also fails, then once again the
hammer comes into play...this time to allow the user to beat the
crap out of the old drive and relieve the frustration of having
lost everything because they thought "backups are for
sissies."
From: Carla Maslakowski
Boot PC into setup and restore drive
settings. CMOS battery must be dead which is why setup lost
settings. Replace CMOS battery in this PC and drive should keep
settings.
From: Todd Layland
Pull the jumper on the motherboard that
will reset the settings (bios, password, etc.) of the system. If
it boots, you know it was a config setting that screwed up. If it
doesn't, well HD are cheap.
From: Dale
First things...first:
· I would flush CMOS and then look at the drive and write down the correct drive settings for Cylinder, Heads, and Sector.
· I would manually enter this data if auto detect could not figure it out.
· If unable to boot after manually setting up the drive, I would check settings in CMOS and then boot from a floppy (THAT I WOULD HAVE BROUGHT WITH ME!) that contained sys.com, fdisk.exe.
· After a successful boot to a floppy, I would do an FDISK/MBR and then reboot the system and let it fallback to a backup MBR.
· If that failed, I would boot to a floppy and do a sys c: then reboot.
· If unable to access the drive after the mentioned steps, I would boot from floppy, change to C: and attempt to recover as much as possible to floppies.
From: Ken Beckett
I would take the drive out of the PC it
is in and take it to another PC put on the secondary IDE. I would
look up the drive parameters and enter those parameters in the
bios. Start the PC and hope to get the drive to run as a
secondary drive.
From: NetMarkC
I've lost my "C: drive before and
was able to get it back by removing and reinstalling the CMOS
battery.
From: dmo
Find out from user which OS he was
running on the hard drive. Install a new drive as Primary and the
damaged drive as secondary. Install the same OS on the Primary
drive and you should be able to see all or most of the data on
the second drive. Copy all data from secondary to the Primary
drive.
From: David Knapp
Oops, didn't read the question close enough. In order to revive a hard drive that won't boot, I do the following.
· Boot to floppy that has the basics on it—fdisk, edit, sys, format, command.com. Fdisk to see if the drive is being recognized by the system.
· If the drive shows up and has a valid partition, then try to access it from dos.
· If you can't access it from dos, I would basically give up, but you can try to sys it too. Depends on the problem.
From: DKauschjr
· I would first go into the bios and attempt to redetect the hard drive.
· If I was unable to get the bios to detect it, I would then go to the drive manufacturer’s Web site and get the manual settings for the drive.
· Next I would get a boot disk from another machine nearby and do a format /s on the drive to bring the operating system back up.
· After fixing the machine, I would then lock the bios and then proceed to flog the user with rubber bands and paper clips for even looking at that enter setup option.
From: David Knapp
We have about 4 standard ghost images
that we base most of our machines (Dell) on. We have a boot disk
that has NetWare drivers for all the network cards we use. We
boot the floppy, login, and re-image the machine once the new HD
has arrived. Then we configure networking, printers, capture
batch file, and install custom software. If they want their data
backed up, then they should keep it on a server.
From: LByer1
Reboot the machine hitting delete key
entering into the cmos setup.
Then click on the restore default values
to allow hard disk to reboot by itself again.
From: Chris Draper
When you support any number of users,
hard drive failures are an unfortunate fact of life. I have had
users cry in front of me when I have had to tell them that all of
their data has gone to "data heaven.” Recovering data
from corrupt or failed drives is more of an art that a science.
· Far and above, the best thing to try first is the old FDISK /MBR command.
· This will rebuild the master boot record. Although not always successful, it has recovered many drives that were not at all readable. However, drives that have experienced head crashes refuse to spin up and need much more attention.
· In these cases, method is critical. Set up the machine with a second hard drive.
· Boot to dos and try to copy the data off the drive using XCOPY. This way if you do run into bad sectors or a crashed head you can simply stop the copy by hitting [Ctrl]C.
· I have even been able to get some drives to spin up by "gently" tapping on them with a screwdriver while they were powered up.
· Please keep in mind that this is a last resort technique.
· I have even frozen a few drives to less than 40 degrees below zero. This will sometimes allow them to spin for long enough to get some data from the drive.
From: Avraham Schkloven
Firstly, I check all my cables (data,
electric). Is the disk spinning does it make those little noses
at startup? If NOT, I try a little tap with the back of a
screwdriver. If it comes to life and boots, I make backups and
replace the disk. If not, well all disks die—it’s just
a matter of when.
If the disk is spinning at startup:
Be aware that many older viruses effect
the boot sector and fats of hard drives and give errors "invalid
drive specification." a good DOS antivirus should be used.
Then I try to reset the setup to the
proper numbers and boot from a floppy disk with the proper
operating system. On this disk is FDISK. I personally use a
program call RESQDISK from Invircible Anti Virus. It has saved my
skin many times in rebuilding the boot sector and fats (one could
try the FDISK /MBR command).
Norton DISK EDITOR for DOS fits on a
floppy and once you boot from a floppy you use it to dump the
content of the C drive off to another drive.
If available I use a new hard drive.
Making the bad drive the slave and the new drive master and try
dumping the disk. This works only after access has been restored.
Unfortunately, some patients do not
survive.
From: KrisMHorn
At times, the hard drive has lost its
Master Boot Record (MBR). Sometimes it will work to type fdisk/mbr
at the dos prompt (usually from a system bootable floppy).
Other times, you may want to use the old
handy command, SYS a: c: (Re-creating the system files on the C
drive).
Usually, if these don't work, your drive
can be sent to a data recovery center (if the data is just so
critical that they can't live without it.) Usually, this costs
hundreds of dollars.... And you would still have to replace the
hard drive in order to obtain the data back from the recovery
center.
From: Denford L. Owens
I use DrivePro by ForeFront Direct. It
analyzes problem areas, can find and repair MBRs as well as
repair them.
From: David Crocker
· I always start by booting from a floppy and seeing if I can access data on the failed hard drive.
· If you can, I then do a sys.com to c: and reboot.
· Once you are back to a c prompt, back up all the crucial data and start over by installing a new hard drive.
· Since this does not always work, more drastic measures have to be taken. I use several different utilities that may be useful.
· If dealing with a windows operating system, I first try scandisk. Obviously if you cannot see the c: prompt, then this does not work.
· I would use Norton’s Disk Doctor first, then would try using Spindoctor.
· I only use this program as a last resort because I have lost the drive in some rare instances.
· Your data is usually still on the failed drive, the problem is the boot sector.
· If these programs do not work to restore the boot sector then, I would try and use Drivecopy to get the data to a good drive and start from there.
· As we all know sometimes all your best efforts are in vain.
Good luck with your test drive.
From: FS296
If the drive just does not boot to C and
it appear that it is spinning and responds to C prompt commands,
I would slave it to another drive and drop and drag files to safe
location, i.e. external hard drive, Zip drive.
From: Norton Seron
1. Disconnect CD-ROM drive and/or 2nd HDD.
2. Remove HDD and read label regarding
"jumper" position for master (without slave) if
necessary.
3. Check power cable plugged into HDD
properly.
4. Check data cable plugged in properly
on HDD and Motherboard.
5. Reboot PC and verify that problem is
still present.
6. Replace HDD data cable.
7. Change power lead for another lead (test
for voltage with multimeter).
8. See 5.
9. Connect different HDD to PC and see if
bios can pick it up.
10. See 5.
11. Check CMOS chip is plugged in firmly.
12. If any of the above result in
function, then boot onto system floppy and "fdisk/mbr"
to fix master boot record and then fdisk to check partition,
followed by DOS scandisk and surface scan to check for bad
sectors on HDD. If bad sectors are found, then back up needed
data and replace and reinstall HDD and OS and APPS.
From: Gilbert Betancourt
Here’s one solution I am using out
in the field. I see many brands out there. The most popular in my
area are Quantum Big foot, Western Digital, and Seagate .
I carry about 2 logic boards of each
brand (popular in my area) and when I see init problems not
relating to crashed heads, or burnt motors…
I just replace the board and backup the
data for the customer. In many occasions, I sell them the logic
board by itself… send board back to factory to get exchanged
for a reasonable price....
Out of all my customer hard drive
problems, 70 percent are taken care of this way.
Hope this might get some techs out there
thinking about implementing something similar.
From: Dave Rutherford
You need to first figure what is not (or
is) happening. If the drives are just not spinning, you might be
in luck. Otherwise, you had better be carrying the 'toolkit' (mostly
software these days).
Drives not spinning? Open the box, and
check the cards and cables. Does the floppy ”seek.” If
it should and should not, check the power +12v is required mostly
for motors...
Nothing loose, then pull and reseat
everything—esp. the memory. Watch it, make sure you are
grounded... you left the system plugged in right? No plug, no
ground.
Still nothing? Here’s one Seagate
tech support told me in the early 80's… it still works like
a charm. Pull the hard disk from the chassis and plug the power
and data back in. Then holding the drive in the left, with the
CABLE end towards you, BUMP IT with the HEEL of your right hand.
ONCE medium hard (this will unseat magnetics, release brake
mechanisms, and even pull heads stuck in soft platter coatings....
I've looked).
Still no go, try one more bump WHEN you
first turn the power on.… Sometimes stuck heads need the
motor to move before they will spin.
LAST ATTEMPT to spin, pull the cover (This
will not destroy data recovery service offerings. Just make sure
nobody smokes around you and it’s fairly clean.) off the
drive. CAREFULLY with power on, push the platter to spin it.
Finally, do you have another drive same
model? You can swap logic boards...just don’t leave it that
way. The read/write electronics are balanced to the heads inside
the drive. This MAY work if you have a bad motor chip, etc.
Now you can send the drive to the service
for data recovery and the big bill.
IF IT’S NOT A SPIN PROBLEM, use a
drive id software (many available) to check how the drive SAYS it’s
set... even though the bios does not get this report does not
mean the drive is dead to this question...! No answer, you can
use some software (like Disk Mangler–—commercial) to
rewrite track 0. THIS IS dangerous, so know what you are doing. I
practiced on bad drives that I had first.
Other things not quite right, swap the
PLACEMENT of RAM in the system... surprised? Shouldn’t be.
Ram is used for just about anything, right from the start. Check
the POWER. Use a good meter.
From: David C. Projansky
With all troubleshooting, you have to
have a logical approach and be able to eliminate problems. When I
get a call from end users that a hard drive has failed I first
ask several questions that will help determine the course of my
actions.
1. I first ask what were they doing
before the failure, i.e. did the PC perform and illegal operation
in an application and have to be rebooted? Did the user just turn
the PC on and nothing would happen? Is the hard drive making any
kind of unusual sounds?
2. I've found most supposed hard drive
failures are really operating system problems, and can easily be
repaired without taking the case apart. I usually like to turn
the PC and pay close attention to any error messages that come up.
Since I always have a Win95 boot disk with me, I usually boot to
DOS so I can at least attempt to recover any data by copying data
files onto floppy disks.
3. Then I usually reinstall Win95. In
worst cases, I have to fdisk the hard drive a reinstall the OS
and all applications.
4. On the other hand, I've had disk drive
fail because of bad cables (a good indication of this is if the
BIOS can't detect the hard drive), power supply problems, and bad
power cables.
It's important to work logically and try
to eliminate the easy stuff before you have to replace a hard
drive.
From: Steve Schoenecker
After questioning the user to eliminate
the upgrade/jumper issues or other changes such as playing with
encryption/privacy utilities, etc.
· I'd boot from a clean floppy (watch closely for indication of an overlay program which might say "to boot from a floppy, hold the spacebar down." This can really eat your lunch!) and then run a dos-based virus scanner such as FPROT or something like that just to be sure.
If the drive is not detected or can’t be accessed at all:
· Look inside and see if the drive configuration specs are on the drive or look them up... make sure power is connected securely data cable etc. Make sure drive is spinning up, verify cmos settings for HD type, and boot order, etc. Visually verify which devices are on which IDE channel etc.
· If I fix the cmos settings, then the system boots okay but not after being turned off...suspect cmos battery...drive is probably okay–good idea to backup important stuff at this point anyway!
· If I cant get to c: drive, I'd probably run fdisk and look at the drive information to see if it thinks that the drive had partitions defined, how many, what size etc. I've seen the fdisk table scrambled mess because of a virus... I have fixed this problem a couple of times... OS2 fdisk utility can help here sometimes... (more of a last resort) best to get important data (if I get it running) and then start over with fdisk/format/reinstall....
· I think I would isolate it on the bus and set the cmos and jumper settings accordingly just in case the other device is disrupting everything
· At some point I would probably replace the drive with a drive known to work normally, and run it to eliminate other system, problems cable problems, etc.
· If another drive works but not this one, and I still cant access the drive at all....punt.
· If critical, consider sending to a data recovery specialist.
If drive is detected but won’t boot:
· Start the system and watch to see how far it gets. If possible boot to c:\ prompt.. if not, boot from floppy.
· If I can access the stuff on the drive, I'd back up. If drive is accessible but won’t boot, I'd check the version of OS then sys the c: drive with an appropriate boot disk. If this doesn't work, maybe fdisk /mbr will help.
· If the OS dies while loading drivers etc.. look there...
Hope I haven't forgotten anything obvious...
each one is different and I usually win! I have a couple of dead
drives in a box... I'd love to hear some new tricks to try on
them!
From: MICHAEL W. BROWN
Order a new identical drive and swap the
controllers.
From: hotmail
Unfortunate the box does matter!
1) Open the box and check for HD's model;
go to manufacturer’s Web page; find out the details (Heads,
Cylinders, sectors per track) and use those at setup, configuring
manually the HD's params; download specific software (EZdrive,
etc.) for the HD's model.
2) Check for OS the user is running.
3) If OS is MS-based (excluding NT), then
get a boot disk under Win95b/98; start the machine and use the
program you've downloaded or if the HD is old, try to use NDD (only
if OS is MSDOS or Win95 do not try to use it if there is a
possibility to have VFAT32 installed).
4) Usually most of us do carry with them
some startup diskettes with an antivirus, so USE IT FOR BOOT (I
myself use an emergency Boot Disk made with the help of McAfee
AntiVirus since it's very usual to run up to a virus).
5) If all the above are pretty hard to
do, then try to install the new HD, and OS; connect the old HD as
a secondary master (or primary slave if that's easier) and start
the computer booting from new HD and try to access the old one.
6) If the old one is inaccessible then be
sure that the drive was installed through BIOS without using any
overlay driver to expand BIOS's addressable HD capacity; If there
was, try to get from Web the latest update of that driver and
install it temporarily (Use a boot diskette rather then
installing at Primary Master's Boot Sector) and boot from that
diskette.
7) Hopefully you've been able to access
HD. If not there may be some tools in the manufacturer's soft
you've downloaded; otherwise ... try to stay calm!!! and proceed
with some Web searching. There are some good tools to access the
partition and try to fix it manually (If you Dare) using a disk
editor to repair boot partition. Well it 's much more complicated
sometimes but you may try it at your own risk. Or you may just
say " Hmmmm..... Told you so... Sorry there is no way out...
you should keep backups!" (an easy solution :->)
From: Doug Wood
I have found that if you cannot hear the
drive spinning by putting your ear next to it, try removing the
drive from the computer and twisting the drive rapidly in your
hand in the plane of the drive. This will sometimes unstick a bad
bearing and allow the drive to spin up.
From: Bill Chomik
What I do in this situation is as follows.
· I always have a spare hard drive with me. I hook this drive up to the computer in question making it the primary drive. The drive that doesn't work, I change the jumper to become a secondary master and attach it to the same ribbon in the computer.
· The computer is then booted up with the good hard drive. In a lot of cases, I then have no problem accessing the bad drive. All necessary files can then be backed up to tape, or copied to the good drive.
· Once this is done, a new drive is put in as the primary drive. The O/S is then loaded on with all other necessary software. The spare drive is then connected as the secondary master and booted up again. All files that were recovered are then copied back to the new drive.
· If the above doesn't work where the bad drive cannot be accessed, any and all loses are accounted for. The old drive is thrown away and replaced with a new drive. The person who doesn't take the responsibility for backing up his data has to learn to live with the consequences of these actions. A lot of times, I'm the one that ends up getting blamed, but you learn to take this with a grain of salt and brush it off.
From: Billy Dunn
The first thing I do is boot on a boot
disk and fdisk/mbr if the computer can see the hard drive but
can't boot after you sys C:.
From: Ben Hardman
Lets see...
· First, I would see if I could see the disk in the BIOS.
· If the HD is visible in the bios, I would try something like fdisk/mbr.
· I would view the partition info and see if it was showing the correct partition info.
· Assuming all of that is correct, I would try running microscope diagnostics and see what kind of errors it is producing—whether it be a seek error or an actual damage to the drive.
· I would first get another drive preferably the exact same model drive.
· I would try and run Symantec Ghost on it and write a script file telling it to ignore bad sectors and continue copying anyway.
· It may not be able to recover all files but this sometimes works. If that still did not work to recover the data portion of the drive...
· I would probably take the new drive that I ordered and take the controller off of it and put it on the failing drive. Many HD situations is not actually a failure in the surface of the HD but in the controller failing due to the fact of the IC chips and many surface mount resistors and capacitors which many times are already failing somewhat before leaving the manufacturer.
· They allow functionality for sometimes several years but you are tossing a coin with each boot of the machine.
· But I digress, back to the controller... After switching controllers see if the drive is visible and the data is in tact. If that does not work verify the drive is spinning up.
· If the drive is not spinning sometimes you can open the drive up and take a pencil eraser and give the platter a little push and the drive will spin up. Of course, this is a last resort option because you will void any warranty that is on the drive.
· I have even gone as far as taking a bad drive whose drive head was bad and removed the platters and put them in a new drive's platters place.
· I had to do this with a UNIX server once because the company had not backed up any data on its servers drive.
From: Zlito
· I always try to reset the defaults in the setup first.
· Then reboot see if the computer holds the info to see if the on-board battery is dead. It’s simple to replace and could save a lot of time.
· If not, maybe a voltage surge hit the cmos and cleared it. This could take some time to find the settings the manufacturer used.
· Or find out if the hard drive had an overlay on it—older proprietary systems used them a lot. If so, try reinstalling the overlay and see if that brings back c:\. If not, leave it with me for a week and I will have it working at full steam.
From: Sasha Baer
I have just had this exact problem. I had
a drive with an NTFS partition and a FAT partition. The NTFS
partition was my boot partition. Anyway, the sorry story was that
my girlfriend hit the power cord accidentally while doing the
vacuuming and the resetting of the computer caused the boot
sector and the MFT to corrupt.
After much searching, I found a helpful
article (http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q153/9/73.asp)
on the MS site describing how to repair the boot sector.
I built a new NT machine and went through
this process. I could then mount the partition but it still
showed up as unknown in Disk Administrator.
I looked for ages on the net and the only
thing I found (over and over) was a program called RecoverNT. I
downloaded this and went through the instructions. It said to
format the drive (that is for my symptoms) and it then searched
the entire drive cluster by cluster to find the files.
The only real annoying this is that the
demo copy only allows for 3 files to be restored and it costs US$250+
to buy). Even though it's expensive, I must say it does a great
job, both for NTFS and FAT. Unfortunately for me, I still was not
able to recover my PST file and Tracker DB–both of which
must be corrupt badly as they were open at the time).
From:Jim Claypool
Start with the basics:
· Reseat the IDE cable at all connection points, checking for bent pins.
· Use a different power connector to the hard disk and make sure it is the only device connected to that branch.
· Clear the BIOS settings.
If the above three did not bring it back:
· I'd look at next trying a different IDE cable.
· If that didn't help, try slaving the drive to another hard disk.
The big problem in the way you described the failure is that there is no communications between the hard disk and the IDE interface. However, if your new master drive does not autotype (even when by itself), look into getting that old drive onto a different IDE interface (like a different machine).
New master did autotype but still can't
see the old drive? During power up, use the fat end of a
screwdriver to gently tap the outside of the suspect hard disk.
Sometimes the arm gets stuck and a gentle tap will free it.
From: Salvatore Valela
I saw this problem once before. The
monkey b virus will take a piece of your boot sector and move it
at an unspecified location on the hard drive. I would run a virus
checker software program to see if you have a virus.
From: Kim Chappell
I came across a situation where the
computer would not boot from the hard drive. The drive was making
a horrible whining noise, and I was getting messages like "invalid
media" or something similar. The user had all of her e-mail
stored in a PST file on the hard drive and had never backed it up.
She was frantic. This is what I did:
· I got another hard drive, loaded it up with Windows 95, and put it in the station.
· I made the original drive a slave and then booted up with the new drive.
· I then had no problem seeing the files on the old drive.
· Apparently only the boot sector was corrupted. I was lucky (so was the user).
· I copied the PST file, and whatever else the user needed, over to the new drive. Worked like a charm.
From: mhicks
A common problem with older hard disk
drives in particular, such as those found in '486 class machines,
is termed ”stiction,” a condition in which the
lubricants that the manufacturer coated the drive platter
surfaces with have gummed up, eventually causing the drive
spindle motor to no longer be able to spin up the drive at power-up
time. The problem may manifest itself intermittently at first,
allowing the user to get started today, by switching the
computer's power off and on again. But finally the day comes when
no amount of power switch jiggling will help.
Here's a trick that just may allow you to
get the drive started, and recover the data the user refused to
back up, even after weeks of obvious notice that the drive had
every imminent intention of going belly up.
· Remove the computer case ”skin,” and dismount the hard drive mechanism from its mounting.
· Hold the drive in your hand, still connected, and turn on the computer's power switch.
· You will be able to hear and feel that the drive refuses to spin up. Most drives have logic that delays the spindle motor start-up about a second, in order to allow the drive electronics to stabilize, and reduce total inrush, or starting current, to the system power supply.
· Turn the power off again, and this time, about a second after you turn the power back on again, move the drive in a quick, forceful, circular motion.
· The object here is to impart some force to the spindle platter, as a sort of mechanical ”jump-start,” so that the force of your manual motion, added to the drive motor's normal start-up torque, will be sufficient to overcome the extra dragging stiction of the gummy lubricants, allowing the spindle to start up.
If this fails the first time, try again.
· Use both clockwise, and counter-clockwise attempts, since you probably have no way of knowing what the actual direction of spin is.
· You'll know immediately when you succeed by the feel of the vibration of the spindle motor starting, and the sound.
· Now, back up that irreplaceable data, make that new drive sale, and restore. Smile modestly when acknowledging your wizardry.
From: Arve Alsvik
The procedure I suggest is absolutely a
last resort thing to do.
I've would have tried to replace the hard
drives controller-card. The card sitting on top of the disk.
Usually it can be removed. And most likely malfunctioning
controller card is the reason for the hard drive crash. But it
have to be replaced with another card from the same type of hard
disk. In a corporate environment this would be easy, but alas, it
may be more difficult in a home situation.
Anyway: This is my only suggestion.
From: John_A_Cook
· The first thing I would do is pull in a BIOS upgrade from the PC manufacturer and flash the system.
· You said that the user got into the Setup and changed the settings. If an upgrade for the BIOS does not find the drive and auto detect the it, then get out the tools and open the machine up to have a look at it's guts.
· Remove the HDD and get the info off of it and manually enter it into the settings.
From: TorA.Rysstad
The most important thing to do in this
situation is to protect the data on the drive. And in my
experience; the more one try to "look" for data on the
disk, the more it might get destroyed.
Try to listen to the hard drive. Are
there any weird sounds emitting from it? I have two "sound
categories.” The first is identified by sort of "buzzing"
sound or perhaps a loud "ploink" sound. The second
category: no sound at all, or the drive seems to running at full
speed, even if the PC is "frozen.” The first might
indicate a physical damage. That might be hard to solve, but that
does not imply that everything is lost. I often find almost
everything on the disk like this:
· Take the damaged hard drive out of the client’s PC.
· Take particular care not to bump the drive. There is a chance that the heads are not parked properly. You don't need more damage to the disk than there already are!
· Put the damaged disk in another PC.
Usually with modern disks you can auto-sense
the needed specs (Heads, Cylinders, etc.), but sometimes you'll
need to type this manually. And of some reason the hard drive
manufactures has not considered it important enough to print this
information on the label. This has puzzled me more than one time...
But you can find all you need on the Internet. The Compaq that
was mentioned was (I think) originally equipped with a Seagate
disk. Their disk Support can be found on http://www.seagate.com/support/disc/discsupt.shtml
Remember that you will probably have to
change the jumper setting. MAKE SURE THE DAMAGED DISK IS SET TO
BE SLAVE!!
Copy the needed files from the damaged
disk
Try to copy the files you need from the
damaged disk. DO NOT try to run Scandisk or Norton Disk Doctor
etc!! These programs might make things worse! Do every thing to
get the files you need first! Afterwards you might consider
attempts to revive the disk. Then Scandisk will be very helpful.
But remember, if the disk has crashed
once, then you should not trust the disk.
If you cannot find anything on the disk,
then I have found that Norton Utilities is amazingly effective.
But there are alternatives available at http://hotfiles.zdnet.com/
Revive is a simple small program. Try it!
I've tried it a couple of times, and it really works!! BTW: The
Prolinea should not be thrown away just yet! If there is a
network card in it, then it can be used as a intranet server.
Install Linux and Apache Web server on it, maybe even FrontPage
extensions, and voila, you'll have a splendid intranet server, or
a test bench for testing Web-ideas! Just remember that:
· A computer this old might not be able to support very large disks (> 1.2 GB)
· Update the BIOS. The Prolinea has Flashable BIOS. So updating the BIOS is very simple. Take a look here:
http://www.compaq.com/support/files/desktops/us/10_22.html
Install Linux without graphical interface.
The 486 processor will not offer the power needed to run KDE or
GNOME in a satisfying way. You will also save allot of disk space.
If you can find a old 540Mb disk then that can be more than
enough!
If you install NT 3.51 Server, then this
computer might be used as a separate printer server. It should be
able to serve approx. 30-40 people without any trouble. But you
should have 32_MB RAM and approx. 500-MB free space if the users
are printing large files, like PowerPoint presentations, etc.