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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] Seagate Sudden Death....
- Date: Sun, 27 Mar 2005 13:25:31 +0900
- From: "Lyle (Hiroshi) Saxon" <ronfaxon@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] Seagate Sudden Death....
- Organization: Images Through Glass
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.7.5) Gecko/20041217
First, the news. An 80GB Seagate drive, not heavily used, and only two years old has suddenly died. Yesterday it was slow to boot up and today it doesn't do anything past the BIOS other than make "zzzzzzzzzz - click, click - zzzzzzzzz chick, click - zzzzzzzzzz" noises, and then displays: "strike F! to retry boot, F2 for setup utility" - all the while continuing the "zzzzzzzzzz - click, click - zzzzzzzzz chick, click - zzzzzzzzzz" noises. Now, for some background on this issue: Some time back I posted a question regarding strange noises that my IBM/Hitachi hard drives were making and we eventually worked out the following: 1) Some older IBM hard drives had a record of suddenly dieing - apparently caused by the head(s) physically sticking to the platter(s). 2) Apparently a new design periodically moves the head assembly to prevent this from happening - thus the strange noises. So, thanks to everyone who helped solve that mystery last time and I have news to report about a Seagate drive. I use a set of computers running through a KVM switch. This does eat up space and the wiring looks like a rat's next, but it provides some benefits: A) Redundancy. A catastrophic failure of any once device isn't too big of an issue - you just shift whatever you were doing on that machine to another one already running through the same keyboard/monitor/mouse (hopefully all important data will have been already backed up!). B) For a heavy user of computers who spends too much time using them but is always short of time to study them, having different OS's running in parallel enables the continued use of old much beloved application software that doesn't run on newer setups. Now, back to the dead Seagate drive. The only thing out of the ordinary I've done with the machine is to make some audio recordings from a set of tapes that I first recorded as .wav files and then converted to MP3. Is there something particularly hard-drive-destroying about doing this sort of thing (about 15 hours of recording over five days)? Or is it just a case of the oh-so-important hard drive just prematurely kicking the bucket? And - other Seagate hard drive users out there - have you had any trouble with your drives? Lyle
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