Pokerfish
Technical User
- Oct 13, 2005
- 8
Some weeks ago, I replaced my 40 GB system-HDD, which was connected directly to the motherboard bus. In addition to the system drive, there was a 200 GB storage-only drive attached to an ATA-100 PCI card. It was divided into three equal 62 GB partitions ("D", "E", and "F").
I replaced the 40 GB drive with a new 200 GB drive which I attached to the same ribbon cable as the old 200 GB drive. I moved the old drive to the slave position, and installed the new drive in the master position. I set the jumpers on both drives to "cable select." (Previously, the old 200 GB drive was set to "master.") I installed WinXP SP2 and applications on the new drive, and everything was back to normal.
However, sometime later, I discovered that some of the contents of folders in the "F" partition were missing.
Then about two weeks ago, I opened the "D" partition, and although all the appropriate folders were there, their contents had been turned into various "gibberish" files and folders. None of these could be used or opened, and stranger still, the displayed file sizes were nonsensical (some folders were "100 GB" or other impossible sizes, given the partition size was only 62 GB). I tried copying the "D" partition at this point, but only got a "cannot read" error. Running chkdsk turned the drive contents into about 60 GBs worth of .chk files. These were virtually useless since the partition was fairly fragmented.
Then today, after reformatting the "D" partition, I later discovered nearly all the contents of the "F" partition had gone missing. I know it was all there, as I accessed the partition as recently as last night. After rebooting, Windows chkdsk ran during startup and deleted all the "orphans." Most of the contents of the "F" partition are now gone. So far the damage has been limited to the "D" and "F" (beginning and end) partitions. The "E" (middle) partition has thus far been unaffected.
Ok, obviously something bizarre is happening with the old 200 GB HDD. I ran the manufacturer's diagnostic utility after the "D" partition got corrupted, and the drive passed all tests (not requiring formatting). I also ran a virus scan and it turned up no viruses. The drive itself is almost three years old, and never had any problems until after I replaced the old 40 GB HDD. The BIOS, the PCI card startup dialogue, and the OS recognize the drive's full capacity (186 GB).
What could be going on, and what should I do to ensure no further loss of data?
Thanks for your advice!
I replaced the 40 GB drive with a new 200 GB drive which I attached to the same ribbon cable as the old 200 GB drive. I moved the old drive to the slave position, and installed the new drive in the master position. I set the jumpers on both drives to "cable select." (Previously, the old 200 GB drive was set to "master.") I installed WinXP SP2 and applications on the new drive, and everything was back to normal.
However, sometime later, I discovered that some of the contents of folders in the "F" partition were missing.
Then about two weeks ago, I opened the "D" partition, and although all the appropriate folders were there, their contents had been turned into various "gibberish" files and folders. None of these could be used or opened, and stranger still, the displayed file sizes were nonsensical (some folders were "100 GB" or other impossible sizes, given the partition size was only 62 GB). I tried copying the "D" partition at this point, but only got a "cannot read" error. Running chkdsk turned the drive contents into about 60 GBs worth of .chk files. These were virtually useless since the partition was fairly fragmented.
Then today, after reformatting the "D" partition, I later discovered nearly all the contents of the "F" partition had gone missing. I know it was all there, as I accessed the partition as recently as last night. After rebooting, Windows chkdsk ran during startup and deleted all the "orphans." Most of the contents of the "F" partition are now gone. So far the damage has been limited to the "D" and "F" (beginning and end) partitions. The "E" (middle) partition has thus far been unaffected.
Ok, obviously something bizarre is happening with the old 200 GB HDD. I ran the manufacturer's diagnostic utility after the "D" partition got corrupted, and the drive passed all tests (not requiring formatting). I also ran a virus scan and it turned up no viruses. The drive itself is almost three years old, and never had any problems until after I replaced the old 40 GB HDD. The BIOS, the PCI card startup dialogue, and the OS recognize the drive's full capacity (186 GB).
What could be going on, and what should I do to ensure no further loss of data?
Thanks for your advice!