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PC & MAC CLINIC - On line problem solving. (CPU)     

Crocodile - 16 Dec 2002 03:59

foale - 30 Oct 2007 20:44 - 6243 of 11003

F2 that Bios set up right....

I did replace the main drive with another...in case it was something else and it found hardware and got to the desktop

with the original in it...spends ages trying to load Windows XP before...giving up with that message

can I get to the desktop without using the HD say booting from the original CD....then seeing if I can acess the C drive via control panel....

afrid I dont know to much about hardware side...

Optimist - 30 Oct 2007 21:00 - 6244 of 11003

Foale

I'm assuming that you are using Windows XP and the NTFS file system.

You can't boot into windows from a CD drive, but if your other hard disk can boot Windows, you should be able to mount your dodgy one as a secondary drive and access it that way.

It's best to mount a dodgy disc as a secondary drive because that means it is not doing the work of running Windows. Copy any data that you have not backed up and then open a command prompt, change to your drive to be repaired and run chkdsk /f

Seymour Clearly - 30 Oct 2007 23:02 - 6245 of 11003

Can anyone help. Before I changed the HD on my PC, I had a paid for copy of "Total Recorder" from www.highcriteria.com. I've lost that, and High Criteria's website seems to be down. I've still got all the registration details.

I don't suppose anyone has a copy of the program they could send me? I'll try the website again in the morning

Optimist - 31 Oct 2007 00:02 - 6246 of 11003

SC

Sorry I can't help you here. But for future problems, I have a directory called Setup that contains copies of all programs on my computer. As a bonus, it is often quicker to copy a CD to the hard drive and run the instalation from there than to install from CD.

DocProc - 31 Oct 2007 07:07 - 6247 of 11003

Seymour Clearly

The web site seem to be back up again now:

http://www.highcriteria.com/

Seymour Clearly - 31 Oct 2007 07:26 - 6248 of 11003

Optimist, thanks - I know I should have done this.

Doc, thanks - I don't seem to be able to get the website again this morning. Will have a go at work later.

foale - 31 Oct 2007 07:40 - 6249 of 11003

Optimist / Symour...thanks for all the help....

re 6244...I have XP dont know about. NTFS...however I am going to try your suggestion... get it up and running using alternate HD...then try adn access it as secondary drive and copy over...

Lets see how that goes...

Seymour Clearly - 31 Oct 2007 07:50 - 6250 of 11003

NTFS is the normal structure to allow seamless large hard disc partitions Foale.

Seymour Clearly - 31 Oct 2007 08:58 - 6251 of 11003

Have got "Total Recorder" now :-)

foale - 31 Oct 2007 09:20 - 6252 of 11003

thanks...once I have booted on the alternate drive...control panel cant recog the other drive...as a secondary one.. do I need a particular selection with my jumpers at the back...or does it not matter?

Seems odd that I need to still press f1 even with the disk that does boot it into Windows...and SATA primary and secondary drives still not recognised...thus the F1 button needed

hilary - 31 Oct 2007 09:35 - 6253 of 11003

foale,

I would've thought that it would be easier to put the dodgy drive into a good machine that boots rather than to put a different primary drive into the faulty machine.

Optimist - 31 Oct 2007 10:07 - 6254 of 11003

foale

Try using disk manager

See my post 6223 -

On XP Start Button - Control Panel - Administrative tools - Computer Management. Then click on Disk management.

Control panel has to be in Classic View for the above to work but there are several alternative ways to get there. You must be logged in with Administrator rights.

Be careful.


Hilary is or course right about sing a different computer if you have one.

Anothe good way is to take the disk out and use an IDE/SATA to USB adaptor (40 from Maplins).

foale - 31 Oct 2007 11:26 - 6255 of 11003

Hils good idea...with try dodgy one on here this arvo....


Have a Maplins down the road...
what does that do..Optimist

Optimist - 31 Oct 2007 12:08 - 6256 of 11003

Foale

It will allow you to connect a hard drive to the USB port on any compuer. Works the same as an external hard drive but without the casing.

This is the model you need it will connect to SATA, IDE and Notebook drives. It is listed ad 25 but they also list one without the SATA connection for 40. I think they have the prices mixed up they tried to charge me 40 for mine. Print the page off and take it with you.

hilary - 31 Oct 2007 12:21 - 6257 of 11003

Foale,

Can I also suggest that you look on eBay. I presume these little goodies are what you need, in which case they're a tenner delivered.

Optimist - 31 Oct 2007 12:27 - 6258 of 11003

Well spotted Hilary those do the same job

foale - 31 Oct 2007 14:47 - 6259 of 11003

someone suggested a caddy..presumably not golf

foale - 31 Oct 2007 14:47 - 6260 of 11003

someone suggested a caddy..presumably not golf

Optimist - 31 Oct 2007 15:03 - 6261 of 11003

foale

The caddy will do more or less the same thing but it is really intended to be used as a regular external drive.

If you want to just mount a disk for repair or cloning then us have to take it apart and insert the disk. Most units will only take one sort of disk. With a cable adaptor you just plug the cable in and leave the disk on the desk. They will also cate for 3 different drives SATA - Standard IDE Notebook IDE.

ValueMax - 31 Oct 2007 16:53 - 6262 of 11003

Another SATA problem... any ideas?

A couple of days ago I used XP disk management to add my SATA disk, formatted as NTFS. It worked fine. I copied a load of files onto it. They copied successfully. When I restarted my PC the next day, chkdsk ran on the SATA disk and now windows won't let me access the files on it saying "the device is not ready". I suspect the data is fine on there, but the drive index (is there such a thing?) has corrupted. chkdsk said something about a system volume information problem.

How do I get the data off the disk?
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