- Strange HDD problem
- Posted by Jimmy on February 19th, 2005
I installed a Maxtor 250GB Ultra Series which was formatted in Dynamic
format ntfs. I filled this with AVIs and removed it in it's removable
drawer. I installed another Maxtor 250 which I formatted in Basis ntsf. I
then replaced old drive D with empty 250G attached to IDE cha. 1. I then
replaced system drive C: with a clone of XP Pro(system backup). Now my
first Maxtor 250 G formatted in Dynamic in it's removable drawer will cause
a system hang at boot. Many other drives in their drawers still work fine
just this one will cause problems. Also: My Maxtor installation gives me an
indication of very slow read when tested. Fist installed Maxtor Read-57522
Write-59187 while the new Maxtor install reports Read-28379 Write 68812. Can
anyone explain the difference and reliability of the Pinnacle Studio 8
calculator.
Thanks for any help or comments on these two issues.
J.
- Posted by philo on February 19th, 2005
"Jimmy" <JimmyCliff@xemaps.com> wrote in message
news:cL2dnXqGZahw5IrfRVn-vg@comcast.com...
put your original C: drive in...
then backup all data on your dynamic drive
- Posted by Jimmy on February 19th, 2005
philo wrote:
Do you think the Dynamic configuration can only be detected by the OS drive
present at the time of format? Could this be a specific requirement?
J.
- Posted by philo on February 19th, 2005
"Jimmy" <jimmycliff@xemaps.com> wrote in message
news:nImdncwP5rVwDIrfRVn-oQ@comcast.com...
yes...
unless you have a very specific reason for using a dynamic drive...
it's best not to use one
- Posted by Jimmy on February 19th, 2005
philo wrote:
That is what I thought. I had formatted this by error. Will have to
convert. Thanks for the tips.
J.
- Posted by philo on February 19th, 2005
sure...
just be sure to get all your data off the drive...
you will loose it when converting back to a standard disc
- Posted by Jimmy on February 19th, 2005
philo wrote:
Ok, I am in the process of file copy now. All is well with the replacement
of C: I had been relying on the other C: drive as a clone for quick backup
purposes but I guess this is a drawback of that strategy.
J.
- Posted by philo on February 19th, 2005
well
at least you still have your original drive...
i, too would have thought that a cloned drive would work...
but i guess not!