Results 1 to 13 of 13
Thread: Computer help required
-
7th February 2006, 06:57 PM #1
Computer help required
Howdy one and all!
I have this annoying glitch in a hard drive that crops up just when it can pi$$ me off the most! Like saving autocad drawings etc.. It started again today but the last episode was two weeks ago and then maybe a month before that!?
What happens is my primary hard drive, when accessed (sometimes) will momentarily cut out and then spin back up again! This causes the system to cark it!
I have a clean system virus wise and all drives are defragmented monthly and there is plenty of space on the drive which is a 40Gig WD.
Any and all thoughts appreciated!The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.
Albert Einstein
-
7th February 2006, 07:24 PM #2
Don't chance losing everything. Get a new hard drive and maybe use that one for back ups, storage etc. A new 80 gig drive won't set you back very much nowadays and is going to cost a lot less than trying to recover lost files or even worse not being able to recover them.
Cheers - Neil
-
7th February 2006, 07:35 PM #3
Follow Neil,s advice but get a 120 gig hard drive or bigger , even if you have to partition , quality drives are under $100 at computer fairs.
There are enough IT guys and gals on the forum to tell you how to reinstall your operating system and copy the files you want without me stuttering through it
Rgds
RussellAshore
The trouble with life is there's no background music.
-
7th February 2006, 07:53 PM #4
-
7th February 2006, 07:57 PM #5
If you hear it spin down and restart thats a bad sign, disk is probably on it's way out.
You could check the power cable that goes into the disk, I've had a bad connection there cause problems, but 9 out of 10 times it's the drive beginning to fail.
Like the guys say, backup all your data now and get a new disk in there.
Cheers
Ian
-
7th February 2006, 08:25 PM #6Originally Posted by Ianab
Cheers,
Keith
-
7th February 2006, 08:37 PM #7
Yep a new hard drive is the go.
I bought an 80 gig Seagate for $80 last week.
Seagate have a nifty program that you can download that will copy all your files onto the new drive and make it the boot disk for you.
It's called DiscWizard.
Probably the other manufacturers have something similar.
-
7th February 2006, 10:46 PM #8
Thanks for the heads up guys!
Looks like a new drive is the go.
Originally Posted by echnidnaThe secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.
Albert Einstein
-
8th February 2006, 07:25 AM #9
Yep, what Craigb said, I used DiscWizard just before Xmas to install a new HD, piece of cake. May I suggest a new Seagate 120Gb 7200.9 series, they are going for about $96.00 at the moment.
-
8th February 2006, 09:38 AM #10
Hi, I'd also suggest consider buying some extra ram after you've replaced the harddrive, if the budget and motherboard will allow it. My first thought was bye-bye harddrive, my second thought was maybe memory issues, but this could be caused by the hard drive problem, so get the HD first, see how it all goes and then maybe consider the additional ram.
cheers
RufflyRustic
-
8th February 2006, 09:50 AM #11Originally Posted by rufflyrustic
I got 256M for 50 bucks the other day.
The new drive and the extra memory did wonders for my old machine.
-
8th February 2006, 06:04 PM #12
Thanks Ruffly for the advice but I already have 1Gig of RAM!
My system is a P4, 3GHz with 3 hard drives (Video editing)
Originally Posted by TermiteThe secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.
Albert Einstein
-
8th February 2006, 06:08 PM #13Originally Posted by Tankstand
Slap in a new drive (don't bother with less than 150Gb these days), and get a copy of Norton Ghost or similar (unless you are using a RAID setup), and image copy your primary drive to the new one (in a partition if you choose). Shut down, and reconnect the new drive per the old one, and with a bit of genuflection in Gates' direcction, should be able to start up.
Could also use the Seagate wizard as mentioned.
The current drive sounds as if it's very rapidly approaching its sell by date....:eek:
BTW: in my main machine, I have 2 7200rpm 80Gb drives with 8Mb buffer (both WD) and 2 160Gb Seagate drives (also 5Mb buffer), all serial ATAs, with RAID 0 for the primaries & RAID 1 for the secondaries. WDs have been fine for over 12 months.
Similar Threads
-
Abbott and Costello in the computer age...
By Groggy in forum JOKESReplies: 4Last Post: 5th November 2005, 08:41 PM -
Computer users
By Peter R in forum NOTHING AT ALL TO DO WITH RENOVATIONReplies: 21Last Post: 16th October 2004, 10:35 PM -
Question for the Computer Whizzes
By BigPop in forum NOTHING AT ALL TO DO WITH RENOVATIONReplies: 13Last Post: 10th September 2004, 09:20 PM -
A Modern Computer Problem
By jow104 in forum NOTHING AT ALL TO DO WITH RENOVATIONReplies: 39Last Post: 7th September 2004, 01:01 AM -
Abbot and Costello (04 version for windows)
By Iain in forum JOKESReplies: 0Last Post: 18th August 2004, 09:32 AM
Bookmarks