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-   -   Help- Hardrive spinning, but no C:\ (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/163003-help-hardrive-spinning-but-no-c.html)

island911 05-14-2004 10:18 AM

Help- Hardrive spinning, but no C:\
 
My notebook (work cmptr) has a drive that has "no partition" . . ."cant find drive C: . . .. (had been working for ~ a year)

I have a back-up drive I've been using (and most all of the files backed up.) However, I would like to recover this drive, as it was. Any suggestions?

I've tried Booting from the XP disk; I'm able to run the "fixmbr" "successfully" . . .but that changes nothing. :(

Running "fixboot" does nothing either.

The drive is recognized by the BIOS as the proper size...

:confused:

BlueSkyJaunte 05-14-2004 10:20 AM

What brand/model? There may be notifications out on the web about things like this.

island911 05-14-2004 10:21 AM

Dell inspiron 8200 .. ..from a few years back (big black brick of a machine)

BlueSkyJaunte 05-14-2004 10:24 AM

I don't know of anything but google turned up the Dell forums:

http://delltalk.us.dell.com/supportforums/board?board.id=insp_harddrive

id10t 05-14-2004 10:33 AM

Sounds like your partition table got hosed. A boot-cd based tool like norton system works (or perhaps a small CD based Linux distribution) could fix it.

Edit - Partion Magic woudl probably be able to fix it as well

island911 05-14-2004 10:49 AM

Thanks, I pulled norton system works off the shelf.
Unfortunately, In its auto-run mode it just does a quick scan for viruses, apparently (no partion fixing tools that I can see)

Interestingly though, the result of the (quick) scan:

memory - scanned & clear

Mstr boot rec- 1 & 0

boot rec - 0 & 0

Files - 0 & 0


. . .so yeah, I think you're right; the partition table got hosed.

I'll go looking for Partion Magic.

Thanks.

BlueSkyJaunte 05-14-2004 10:51 AM

So this was just spontaneous? Makes me even gladder I spent the time installing Gentoo last weekend....

island911 05-14-2004 10:55 AM

Yeah, spontaneous. . . .it froze . . blue screen-o'death

At least I know enough not to put all my eggs in one quazi-stable basket. . . but there are a few eggs I would like to save, if reasonably possible.

Oh, and thanks, blue, for the Dell link. I've used it in the past, but seems more questions there, than answers . . ..all the smart guys (and gals) drive Porsches, doncha know. :D

john70t 05-14-2004 11:53 AM

It boots up o.k. (bios, physical HD and OS are o.k.) but can't access the info on the rest of the drive?
No expert by any means, but it sounds like someting(software) wiped the partitions/registry. Is there an updated bios from the Dell site? Do they have any free registry fix utilities, or do they have a "you buy you leave" policy like Sears?

CDs are cheap by the pack, and if you keep only shortcuts to your files on the desktop which are stored on the hard drive (instead of within the Windows enviroment), the system runs faster and Windows can be reinstalled multiple times(sometimes necessary :() without losing any stored data.

island911 05-14-2004 12:03 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by john70t
It boots up o.k. (bios, physical HD and OS are o.k.) but can't access the info on the rest of the drive?. . .
No, BIOS is good, recognizes hard-drive size & type, and then nothing.

Because this is my work cmptr, it never goes "online" . . .as cheap (and I mean cheap in all its definitions) as cmptrs and software are, there is just no reason not to have dedicated boxes.
Anyway, exceeding low chance of a virus. . . unless it came with off-the-shelf software (in which case I believe the problem would be considered a "feature") :rolleyes:

BlueSkyJaunte 05-14-2004 12:57 PM

I've heard of this new virus called "Windows"...seems people keep installing it all on their own!

rickeolis 05-14-2004 01:57 PM

Do you have the original factory setup CD's? I'd try them from boot.

Also, there are some bootable diagnostic programs out there that tells you the condition of system devices like memory and hard drives, do know of any?

Also, try an old DOS 6.22 boot disk to see what FDISK says about the drive???

fintstone 05-14-2004 02:17 PM

Hey...the drive on my 8200 did the same. Ended up being a bad drive. Seems the hitachi/IBM travelstar portable drives in the 8000 series all fail at about the 1 year mark...usually about one week after their warranty ends. Most get noisy first..guess that is a warning sign. Since Dell installs it, IBM Hitachi does not honor their usual warranty...and Dell's warranty period is only a year. Wish I had backed up my work better. I got a bigger/faster (supposedly improved) Travelstar....(just plugged right in) new off EBay. It is a 60 GB, 7200 RPM, 8 MB Buffer Hard Drive. It cost $289, but came with a 3yr warranty.

cegerer 05-14-2004 02:41 PM

Is this plugged into the same circuit as the dishwasher?

84porsche 05-14-2004 02:42 PM

It obviously seems like a hard drive problem because you can at least get to the Bios. If you know anybody that has another Dell Inspiron 8200, try their hard drive in your laptop and if it boots - you'll know for sure. Another suggestion is get it to boot from a USB hard drive.

I unfortunately deep fried my motherboard 1 month out of warranty, so my 8200 sits until a reasonable solution appears.

island911 05-14-2004 03:12 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by cegerer
Is this plugged into the same circuit as the dishwasher?
LOL . . .(damn electronics. )

We both know that Mechanical solutions are far superior. ;)

fintstone - thanks .. and yeah its a Hitachi. though still spins-up. . .it just became unstable. I'm glad I had a spare drive.

I have yet to try the Partition Magic . ..I'll update if it works.

beepbeep 05-14-2004 03:50 PM

Connect it to another computer as a slave. Try to copy/save as many files as you can. If you cannot salvage anything, make a decision if it's worth it to send it to data-recovery firm (500$ and upwards).

After that, do a low-level format and check out the disc with Hitachi's own software to see if surface is defective. If it is, send it back to Hitachi and you will recieve a new one (in case itäs still under it's 3-year warranty). If not, do a NTFS format and install Windows all over again.

BlueSkyJaunte: It's a probably mechanical, non-OS problem

fintstone 05-14-2004 04:14 PM

The warranty is by serial number...Dell saves bucks when they buy the drives by not buying the warranty..so IBM/hitachi will not honor those with serial numbers that they sold to Dell...I tried. You must go through Dell who only offers a year warranty unless you purchased a maint. agreement. You probably will not be able to copy any files, because the machine will not recognize the formatting. If it starts working briefly...copy any files you want them immediately because eventually it will stop altogether. Good luck.

Icemaster 05-14-2004 04:38 PM

If all else fails, I MAY be able to recover it for you. No promises, but I've got an OnTrack tool that I use when my engineers get a little jumpy and do stupid things like FDSIK hard drives before ghosting the machine.

Have you pulled the hard drive? Shoot me the model number and I'll see if I've got an external cable that fits it.

No promises....

beepbeep 05-14-2004 04:42 PM

In EU countries, each HD-manufacturer must provide three year end-user warranty for it's harddrives. It effectivly means that i can buy second.hand computer from a third person and if HD craps out i can send it to IBM/Hitachi/Seagate/whatever and get a new one as long as it's less than three years old.

If you plan to send it to data-recovery companies, don't try any DIY repair. Chances are you'll just make it worse...

island911 05-14-2004 05:02 PM

Hey thanks, Icemaster. . . though I made the decision, that the old files wern't worth the hassle.. . .just did a format/re-install.

You could give me a recomendation for ghosting software, though.

btw, the hard drive seemed to take the new formatting just fine. So how was the problem a mechanical one?

john70t 05-14-2004 05:16 PM

My memory is too slow(head not the box) for this one, sorry.
There was a pretty good shareware (worth buying) I tried before called "file recover"(I think this was the one) that found over half the missing files on a hard drive that crashed. If they haven't been written over it still might be worth trying out.

BlueSkyJaunte 05-14-2004 05:40 PM

beeper, perhaps you missed my Dell rant some time ago. :D

Didn't want to re-hash an old rant. ;)

Icemaster 05-14-2004 06:25 PM

I use Norton Ghost, good options for backup.

It might not have been a mechanical issue, I've seen systems do some pretty weird things from time to time. I would give even odds though that if it happened once...

If I remember right, you should be able to go to Dell's support site (try this link...http://support.dell.com/filelib/Devices.aspx?Category=13&OS=WW1++&OSL=EN&SvcTag=&S ysID=INS_PNT_P4_8200) and download a hard drive diagnostic app that you can run after you get the system imaged. It should be able to give you some insight on the drives status.

I've seen drives fail for inexplicable reasons, overall they're usually pretty damn tough considering what we demand from them. That doesnt mean that they're not infallible though. Dell once had a technical publication that instructed technicians to hold a laptop appriximately 2 inches above the work surface, then drop it. This was to fix hard drives.

I kid you not.

fintstone 05-14-2004 07:54 PM

Don't expect it to last long..sounds like how mine started before dying completely. If you go the Dell BBS there are hundreds of folks with the same problem (all p1ssed off) wityh that drive. Seems to be some sort of manufacturing problem that they fixed in the new drives.


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