shadow460, on Sun Dec 18, 2005 12:40 AM, said:
Zero, when you get back, I'd like to know what happened since I rely heavily on these two Maxtor drives.
Both drives that failed on me were DiamondMax SATA drives... one was 160GB and the most recent one was 200GB. Both died as a result of a power failure (How this killed the drive is something I still don't understand... but if you're relying on similar drives, then I recommend you get a UPS for the system).
The strange part is that I was able to reboot just fine. Since I hadn't rebooted in about 5 months, I took the time to compile the latest NVidia drivers... partway through the install, I started getting a bunch of ATA errors from the kernel and the install failed. At this point, I backed up whatever I felt was necessary (strangely enough, there were only about 5 files I felt it was worth backing up, as everything else was just junk I knew I could download again), and posted my previous post using Lynx. I tried running fsck on the drive, but all the ext3 tools kept telling me the superblock was wrecked, even when I had it try to read the backup superblocks.
I eventually managed to get the install to finish without errors, and got into X Windows, but eventually things failed enough that I was forced to reboot... at this point, GRUB wasn't even able to boot off the drive. I haven't really tried anything else, since so far this is exactly what happened with my previous DiamondMax drive, and I never managed to get very far with that one either. The frustrating part is that part of getting warranty service from Maxtor is running their "PowerMax" program to try to diagnose and repair the drive if possible. The problem here is that this software doesn't support most of the more popular SATA chipsets. Luckily, I found out that my brother has a friend with an older SATA board that IS supported, so I was able to get him to run their crappy software on the older drive to get a diagnostic code in order to authorize a return. Looks like I'll have to do the same for this newer one. Although I'm told I can actually call Maxtor and get them to issue an RMA without the code, I still think it sucks that their software can't work with my very common chipset.
I've cobbled together a replacement computer for the time being. It should be enough to keep up with HSC stuff, but it's very frustrating to use for various reasons (400MHz, 128MB ram, Win XP, etc...), so you probably won't see me online much until I can get a replacement from Maxtor.
--Zero