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New drive replicating old drive mechanical error.

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gished2

Technical User
Nov 14, 2005
1
GB
Hi,


I have a 120gb PATA seagate drive (7200.8) which after about a year started acting like it couldn't access part of the disk. The drive would make a quiet clicking sound for several moments and either a/crash the OS or b/find what it was after and continue as normal. I rebuilt the PC and it seemed ok for about a month before it started acting up again.

Ok, my assumption was at this point this drive was going to die. I feared as such one night when the PC crashed and I could not boot into windows or run the seagate diag tool (without it getting so far and causing that noise) - However the next morning the PC booted fine!?


So I go out and buy another drive (160gb Seagate 7200.8). Setting up the old drive as a slave seemed ok. The old drive made no noises whatsoever - I assumed the fault is sommewhere with the sectors used by the C:\

(ok now the wierd part)

Less than 5 days of having the new drive installed, last night it crashed with the same noise (sounded like it was trying to access something) It really had me worried when I went to reboot and a system file had become corrupted making windows unbootable.

Now I had a image of the C:\ which I used previously so I thought "what the hey, lets just reimage it" and sure enough the drive now seemed ok... until after about 2 hours later when I was watching a movie on the PC (movie was also on the drive) froze up to the familier noise of the HDD sounding like it was tryng to access something.

I find it incredibly hard to believe I have two drives with the same mechanical error which can be partially corrected with a reimaging.

I realise this is a long shot, but has anyone seen such a fault before? Is it mechanical or software related!? Its strange that a new drive would do this with a fresh image esp since it was only built >5 days ago.


Thanks in advance
K


Other info - could this be pwer related? Occasionally my 6600GT reports that its dropping its level of gfx due to lack of power. Has only happened over the past week or so and only once or twice (I've turned on power monitoring and turned off a system fan this morning to see what happens)
 
It does not happen every day, but it's possible that both HD's are defective.
You can run Seagate's diagnostics(available at their site) to check both drives.

WRT insufficient power, it appears that your PS is undersized based on the video card's message.
What is the make, model, and watt rating of the PS, and what are your system's specifications?
 
If i were getting that message from my video card I know i would be getting a new power supply in there fast.
I wouldnt be surprised if that corrected all your problems.


Good advice + great people = tek-tips
 
I agree with garebo, if you are having low power problems it could be corrupting the hard drive files, causing it to search harder until it is too corrupted to function.
 
gished2,

"Setting up the old drive as a slave seemed ok."

Try running with the old drive disconnected. It is probably drifting in and out due to failed/failing PCB component.
 
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