On Sat, 29 Jan 2005 00:29:37 -0600, Ronn!Blankenship
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
:
> the night this happened.  So, you experts out there, any ideas on how to
> completely repair the problem(s), or at least recover the data?

My sympathies.  I've just had my computer crap out on me, (including a
broken HD), as well, so I know the pain and inconvience...

Steve's suggestions are good: check the jumpers and just try one drive
at a time to eliminate the power supply as a potential issue.  Also
check to make sure your IDE cable is well seated at both ends.  And
check the power connector connection on the drives as well - those
%^&*$% molex 4-pin power connectors are the worst.

Other thoughts:
- What is saying the drive is an unknown device?  The BIOS, or Windows
when you boot with the working disk?
- Most PC BIOS's allow you to go in and fiddle a bit with the IDE
device detection, I know one of my old PC's BIOS had an option to
autodetect the hard disk.  It's worth trying to fiddle around in the
BIOS if you haven't already tried.
- Given that you've got 3 previously working drives all not responding
at the same time, it makes me think it's a
configuration/cabling/jumper problem rather than actual drive
failures.  Is there any way for you to try the drives on a different
computer?
- On my brand new PC (replacing the crapped out one), it wouldn't
properly detect either of my (new/working) hard disks until I disabled
the RAID option in the BIOS - does your PC support RAID, could the
option for it have been accidentally activated somehow?
- It's not likely to be a fix for you, but I'll mention it any,
because I wish I had heard it earlier than I did.  Sometimes disks die
because of "stiction" as it's called, where the just disk won't spin
up one day.  That's happened to me a few times in the past, and it's
catastrophic because there's no warning.  Over at the Anandtech
forums, I've seen a number of people swear that they've revived a dead
disk by popping it in the freezer for a few hours, then immediately
plugging it in, and it would spin up and work long enough to retrieve
the data off it.  I haven't tried it, but if the disk is dead anyway
and you've lost valuable data, it might be worth a shot.
- There is software that can pull lost data files and directories off
even a reformatted disk (est $100), but if your computer won't
recognize the drive at all, that won't help you.
- If you're really desperate to get your data and all else fails,
there are data recovery services that can very likely help.  I've seen
some as cheap as $200-500, but prices can go much, much higher.
- Advice from someone who's been burned by lost data many different
ways: Paranoia is good.  Invest in a DVD recorder and some backup
software, and try to back up at least semi-regularly.

Good luck!
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