Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Hardware and Software => Topic started by: Octavius on March 22, 2003, 12:34:21 PM
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September 2002 -> March 2003. RIP
Best thing is, I find out it's dead when I return from a week's vacation in Florida. I was LIVID... and still am in a way.
Sent an e-mail to the site where it was purchased AND to Western Digital. Hopefully I can get some $$ back as I already have a new identical drive from a local vendor.
Sigh... out of all the ****ty things to happen to a HD, why me? heh. Murphy's Law.. grr
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Since 1994 I will never purchase Western Digital Products. I suggest you do the same. IBM also.
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I don't use WD drives anymore. I posted a while back that I have had 3 20 GB drives and 1 40 GB drive die on me recently ... well now the last remaining 20 GB drive has died as well since then.
The 20 GB drives were all WD200BB series drives. The 40 GB drive was a WD400BB.
On the 20 GB drives the first died after 6 days. It's replacement from RMA to WD lasted around 5 months. The replacement for the replacement lasted 6 months. (I replaced this one with a Seagate.)
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LOL, my 45 GB IBM 75GXP drive is still running great after 2 years...
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Octavius...if you can only get a replacement for your dead drive, buy yourself an IDE RAID card and mirror the suckers. At least your data will be safe then.
SOB
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Bloom same here; 45Gb IBM GXP75 made in some east-european ex-commie country (hmm wa it Romania or Bulgaria, something like that...) is still working like a charm :)
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Never had an IBM drive die on me. I am still running a 13GB ATA66 IBM drive after nearly 4 years. Hell the thing has run longer than my Maxtor 80GB I bought last spring. I got exactly 8 months out of that one before I had to send it back for RMA.
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Problem is that the failure rate of new drives is shooting WAY WAY up....as evidenced by the piss poor 1 year warrenty crap that started last year. This is due to a bunch of issues...most of which are because of YOU!
Thats right, all of us have gone after the cheaper and cheaper drives, leaving the quality drives on the shelf to collect dust. You can still get a premium drive with a 3 year warrenty, but its not going to be $89 after rebate. As with all things, if you go after the cheapest price to the exclusion of all other concerns...eventually that all that is left...the cheap crap.....need I point out the current joystick market?
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Alf,
This was my first hard drive purchase and I bought it solely off of recommendations and review reading throughout the net. I had posted on here back in september and had been told that I would love it.
Trial and error.
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Thing of it is this ALF. I paid well over $200 for that 80GB drive last year. I paid nearly that for the IBM 13GB I bought that is still humming along. I don't mind paying for the best hard drives but I recall WD drives being pains the butt many moons ago as well.
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I've had WD, IBM, and Maxtor die on me. WD JB series is still AFAIK the fastest IDE drive so that's what I'm using.
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Thats the nature of hard drivers - they are mechanical and prone to failure no matter how reputable the brand is.
Ive had two IBM 60GXP die. An original and the replacement. They performed excellent before death.
I am currently running a Western Digital (100gb, 8mb cache) and its been very reliable so far, knock on wood.
I hope it doesnt die all of the sudden like yours did. At least the IBM's made sounds announcing their death, like a dying person farting and coughing.
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I threw it inside another machine, booted off a good HD, and I can now somehow access the files.
The old, crap HD is unbootable (bad boot sector?), but I was able to recover most of the important info running File Scavenger from the good HD.
The old, crap Western Digital is a phantom... works when it feels like it.
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have Maxtor drives out of five year warranty..still running fine....
Get wife into digital photography.... will need to continue to upgrade disk drives every year...... drives never out of warranty...
Use old systems as backup on home lan..... photos, documents, music. and pst files are all on at least 3 systems.....
Game machine boots of 10k IBM SCSI drive... runs fast and great for over 2 years........still going....
Also using "Virtual drive" which puts cd images on hard drive...no longer have to search for office,photoshop etc cds.... great program (time saver) when putting new sys together....
Anyone familiar with LAN push programs I wuld like to hear about so can install stuff over LAN....
BTW... have 2800+ running with Swifttech 462.... not as loud as I expected and temp stays at 31..... impressed..... also my 3d scores did not get better going from AMD 2000 to 2800Barton....
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hehe thanks pulled out a old quantum 30 gig 7200 i had pulled out of a friends comp fried. hard drive telephoned maxtor ( guess they bought them out)
the new one is one the way :)
p.s. have probly used 10 or 12 wd hard drives over last decade have never had a problem at all.
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Originally posted by Octavius
I threw it inside another machine, booted off a good HD, and I can now somehow access the files.
The old, crap HD is unbootable (bad boot sector?), but I was able to recover most of the important info running File Scavenger from the good HD.
The old, crap Western Digital is a phantom... works when it feels like it.
You might try a reformat on the bad HD once you have backed up your data. I had an IBM do the same things you are describing, and it has worked fine since I reformatted it.
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I know 6 ppls /including myself/ who lost data on HDD IBM 40+GB last 4 month.
IBM if very fragille on power dump:(
but i have samsung 16GB, working about 18 h per day whole year and still running:)
Samsung rulez?;)
ramzey
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IBM had a big quality problem with their factory in Hungary.