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James Sweet James Sweet is offline
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Default HDD 'died' cyclic redundancy error


"Eeyore" wrote in message
...


Meat Plow wrote:

Eeyore wrote:

Never seen this before.

A HDD of mine (IBM Deskstar 20GB IC35L020AVER07-0) 'died' when I
restarted
Windows (XP btw FWIW). Windows shut down OK seemingly but wouldn't
restart.

It totally 'locked up' the PC with no error message. Never seen
anything quite
like that before so it took me a little while to pinpoint it. The BIOS
found the
drive OK btw.

Anyway, I got things sorted and then re-attached it as a secondary
drive.

Trying to look at it, Windows Explorer 'froze' for a bit but it did
load a drive
icon eventually. However Windows Explorer was of no further help.

I then used XP's command.com and got the cryptic message 'cyclic
redundancy
error'.

Any ideas what's up ? Is the drive destined for silicon hell or is it
recoverable ? I'm wondering if the system area's data's been trashed
for
example.



If the drive spins up and locks in RPM and the actuator does click or
thrash and it's recognized by the BIOS then the data is recoverable by
you
with the right software.


That's sort of what I was thinking. The drive is very quiet so it's not
easy to
determine if it's spinning even. That's why I had it ! Even head movement
is near
silent normally.

There's certainly no 'thrashing' though.


The CRC is an error that the data you're trying to read does not pass a
redundant
check so you may have some bad blocks on the drive.


Again, that was roughly my thought. In years past I'd have used Norton
disktools with
some certaintly that it would find what's up. Not sure what to do now.
It's formatted
as FAT(32) not NTFS if that helps.


Graham


There's some really good tools out there, unfortunately I forget the name of
the one I used, but I found a free demo of it online a couple years ago.
Google for data recovery software and try one out. A word of caution though,
if the data is valuable, take the drive to a pro, you risk destroying it
beyond recovery by attempting to recover it yourself.