I have a very strange problem... want to see if anyone has heard of anything similar happening before.
I have a new Seagate 300GB drive which I installed one week ago after a previous drive crashed. It's been working just fine in that time. Tonight I was swapping drives (there are three total) to get the old drive in hoping to recover some data. At one point after swapping cables the system did not initialize at all... the POST never even started up (no signal at all to monitor, no keyboard, nothing). I found after unplugging all drives that only unplugging the new drive power would the make the system initialize.
So just plugging in the new drive power (with the data cable disconnected) somehow keeps the motherboard from working. Bad drive or power supply seems the obvious culprit, but neither shows sign of being bad. The drive seems fine, it spins up and I can hear the power-on seek of the heads. A voltmeter checking the power suppy finds absolutely no difference whether the drive is plugged in or not, the +5V red wire and the +12V yellow wire are unchanged (i.e. the drive is not shorting or overloading the power). Yet the system fails to boot up.
The system is a five-year old 800Mhz Pentium, so the power supply is getting old but I can conceive of no way in which it could fail quite like this. Any ideas?
I have a new Seagate 300GB drive which I installed one week ago after a previous drive crashed. It's been working just fine in that time. Tonight I was swapping drives (there are three total) to get the old drive in hoping to recover some data. At one point after swapping cables the system did not initialize at all... the POST never even started up (no signal at all to monitor, no keyboard, nothing). I found after unplugging all drives that only unplugging the new drive power would the make the system initialize.
So just plugging in the new drive power (with the data cable disconnected) somehow keeps the motherboard from working. Bad drive or power supply seems the obvious culprit, but neither shows sign of being bad. The drive seems fine, it spins up and I can hear the power-on seek of the heads. A voltmeter checking the power suppy finds absolutely no difference whether the drive is plugged in or not, the +5V red wire and the +12V yellow wire are unchanged (i.e. the drive is not shorting or overloading the power). Yet the system fails to boot up.
The system is a five-year old 800Mhz Pentium, so the power supply is getting old but I can conceive of no way in which it could fail quite like this. Any ideas?