CRTGAMER wrote:I doubt the Hard Drive PCB is bad, the mechanical side of a drive will usually fail first... Really, try (using the drive as a slave)
If you can't pull a directory from the old drive as a slave D drive, at this stage install Recovery software on the NEW C drive. A last resort, then attempt a repair or extraction from the old bad drive in the D slot.
I did try that. I don't have a USB enclosure, but I did set the dead one as a slave at the end of the cable, but as long as the drive was banging, the system wouldn't read either drive on the IDE cable. I suppose I could try again with the working drive on IDE1 and the broken drive on IDE2.
Hazerd wrote:Sorry but this is kind of lol to me, 12 year old 8gb hdd, o man....

Hobie-wan wrote:If grandma mostly goes to the grocery store and church every week then her 1982 Chevette does the job as long as it is in working order. She doesn't need a V8 Suburban with a trailer hitch on it.
Understandable. If I wasn't the one dealing with this, I'd be

instead of
I feel I would be more productive if I was repairing a typewriter.
(And of course, I come back New Year's Day - less than 24 hours later - to find him grandstanding that he found a great deal, on New Year's Eve no less, for a machine that's twice the budget he initially told me about from an unknown dealer at the end of a narrow road. And the best part is that, despite being a brick and mortar store, the machine isn't even in his hands yet.
Just... why?! )
My scheduling skills have died of dysentery; I hope to visit at least on a monthly basis.
Still, don't forget to tip your waitress.