"Disk read error, please reboot"

kaizersose

Golden Member
May 15, 2003
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My machine posts just fine, but as soon as Windows (XP Pro) tries to load, I get a blinking cursor for a minute or two and then it says, "Disk read error, please reboot". It's a ~3 year old WD 80GB w/8MB buffer.

Anyone seen this before? Thanks.

K
 

athlonxp2200

Member
Mar 17, 2005
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Iv'e seen this before. The problem was the IDE cables in the computer weren't connected to the hard drive tight enough. You might also check the floppy cable.
 

SparkyJJO

Lifer
May 16, 2002
13,357
7
81
last time I saw that was a loose cable, the time b4 it was a case of WD sudden death syndrome
hope its a loose cable, but on a WD that old, well....
 

kaizersose

Golden Member
May 15, 2003
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is there a way i can tell if the drive is kaput?

i have a newer 200GB seagate 'cuda. i am considering installing windows on that and just trashing the old WD but that will take a lot of time that i dont have. any boot level utilities to check the health of the drive?
 

kaizersose

Golden Member
May 15, 2003
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crap, just read up on this at hardwareanalysis.com and it looks like a LOT of people have had this problem and there is no clean fix. people suggest running checkdisk but that isnt guaranteed. i think i will try to get it up and running, move everything to the new drive and chuck this thing.

any suggestions still appreciated.
 

kaizersose

Golden Member
May 15, 2003
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checked the cable connections and they are all good. i am thinking about trying a new IDE cable but the more I read, the less likely it looks like that will help. the thread at HA forums is 11 pages long and 75% are to report having the problem on one or more drives.
 

Madwand1

Diamond Member
Jan 23, 2006
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Since you can't use your OS (unless you another working computer to which you can connect this drive), you'll have to user boot-level utilities to start. You should look for low-level utility from your HD manufacturer. Most of them have DOS floppies and/or bootable CD ISO's. Here's a link for WD:

http://support.wdc.com/download/index.asp?swid=1

You might get additional help / access to other utilities if they exist if you contact them for support.

You might also try booting off the OS installation CD and running a repair.

Of course, if your drive is really toast, it's time to move on to a new setup; recovering what files you can, if you can.
 

athlonxp2200

Member
Mar 17, 2005
113
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If you can, try to listen for the hard drive spining up and then shutting I a Fijitsu that does that(don't no why I kept it). If it does then it looks like it should be replaced.
 

Velk

Senior member
Jul 29, 2004
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Have you moved your drives around or added new drives recently ? You can also get disk read error if your system has an invalid drive ID for c: in the registry even if the hardware is working perfectly well. ( For example if you clone the current windows xp boot drive and then try to boot off the new clone without reassigning drive letters ).