TSGL: Slave drive not seen
Ian Ramsey-Planck
iarp at cogeco.ca
Sun Jan 6 13:30:56 EST 2008
Don Wrote:
If the old drive was "cooked", would Device Manager and BIOS still see it?
Technically yea, because power would still be getting to the control board
of the hard drive itself. If you hold onto the drive and start the computer,
if it isn't spinning...
If your sure the hard drive isn't working, isn't spinning or whatever you
can put the hdd in a zip lock bag, put it in the freezer overnight(24hours
seems to be the perfect time) then when you're ready take it out, hook it up
and you've about 20minutes.
BTW Is the 'slave' drive SATA or IDE?
Thanks
Ian R-P
iarp at cogeco.ca
http://www.iarp.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: list-bounces at tsgserver.com [mailto:list-bounces at tsgserver.com] On
Behalf Of Don Penlington
Sent: January 6, 2008 1:14 PM
To: Tech Support Guy Mailing List
Subject: TSGL: Slave drive not seen
I'm setting up a new computer for a friend. He has had the hard drive from
his old computer temporarily installed as a slave drive on the new computer
so that he can extract his files from it. (His old computer suddenly failed
for some unknown reason and he has no backups).
The new system is XP SP2 with AVG a-v and Zone Alarm Pro, which I have
installed for him.
The 2nd drive is seen as a slave in bios, and is seen with no details other
than its name ("WD.....") and size in Device Manager, which says it's
working OK.
It is not visible in My Computer, nor in Drive Management.
I have tried uninstalling its driver in Device Manager and rebooting, but
that didn't make any difference.
I have run "Restore" which is a data recovery utility, but it doesn't see
the old HD either.
Is there any way I can make it readable? I could possibly try
partitioning the old drive via the XP CD, but I fear that that process will
wipe all existing data, and I don't want to risk that. I'm not sure if it
would even show up or whether it would be effective in any event.
If the old drive was "cooked", would Device Manager and BIOS still see it?
Any suggestions on how to make the old drive visible? Otherwise I'll get
him to take it into the local shop which built the computer to see what
they can do.
Don Penlington
From the Beach at Surfers Paradise in sunny Queensland.
Computer tutorials, local scenery, and other things at my website:
http://users.tpg.com.au/deepend/index1.html
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