- Jul 11, 2001
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I bought this drive along with a 200 GB and 120 GB 2½ years ago. They are all in this, my main desktop system. Fortunately, the 160 GB is the least critical since I used only for backup and temporary DVR stuff. I was ripping a DVD with DVDShrink and when I put in the DVD-RW disk to write to I got a couple weird error messages about being unable to write. Head scratchers and I figured it was my old Windows 2000 OS going a bit crazy again (due for a reinistall any day). However, I see now that the drive has disappeared from Explorer, isn't shown in Device Manager or Disk Management and it's not showing up in the BIOS under IDE devices. Is there any thing I should do before calling Seagate support for an RMA?
I've had probably close to a dozen HDD's and never had an actual failure. I RMA'd one that was having bad sectors early on. This thing gave me no warning at all. A little over a year ago all the data on the drive was lost but I think that was because Windows 2000 in combination with my MB IDE controller didn't support that big a drive. It had been on my Promise IDE card, which did support it but I put it on the MB controller instead and the data loss occurred, I think when the data on the drive reached past a certain limit (about 120 GB, IIRC). When that happened, the drive did show up in Device Manager, etc., it just didn't show up as "healthy" and formatted. At that point, Seagate assumed the drive was OK and I reformatted it and used a registry hack to force Windows 2000 to accept the drive so I don't get complete data loss again.
I've had probably close to a dozen HDD's and never had an actual failure. I RMA'd one that was having bad sectors early on. This thing gave me no warning at all. A little over a year ago all the data on the drive was lost but I think that was because Windows 2000 in combination with my MB IDE controller didn't support that big a drive. It had been on my Promise IDE card, which did support it but I put it on the MB controller instead and the data loss occurred, I think when the data on the drive reached past a certain limit (about 120 GB, IIRC). When that happened, the drive did show up in Device Manager, etc., it just didn't show up as "healthy" and formatted. At that point, Seagate assumed the drive was OK and I reformatted it and used a registry hack to force Windows 2000 to accept the drive so I don't get complete data loss again.