Quote:
What's the history of this drive?
Approx 2 years old, was an original part to the PC as I purchased it. No problems that I can report. The evening before the PC worked fine. My last action was to start copying about 3GB of photos off of a SD card. I started the copy and went to bed. The next morning it was stuck at the BIOS splash screen (Manufacturer's logo and f-Key options) It did not respond to keyboard input. I do not know what prompted the reboot. No other electronics in the house were affected and the PC is protected by a UPS, so I do not think a power surge was responsible.
In anycase from that point has been recovery efforts. First attempting multiple boots of the original PC, while attaching/detaching various components in order to isolate what the problem was. Once I determined the problem was with the drive, I attempted to connect it to two other PC's without success. (The others would actually accept keyboard input, so I could get into the BIOS set up and see that the drive was not seen by BIOS.) One of the other PC's had a IDE cdrom drive, so it could boot to a CD while the drive was attached. (There was a significant delay at boot.) I attempted a SYSRECOVERYCD (v2.

but it would not see the drive. (During boot, the it reported several "SRST failed (errno=-16)" messages.) I also attempted to boot a SEATOOLS for DOS CD, but the application also did not see the drive. At that point, I ordered a USB to TTL adapter and put the drive on a shelf.
Quote:
Do you remember each terminal command that you performed already (e.g. did you keep a log of your terminal sessions so far)?
I did not keep a log. (in hindsight that would have been a good idea.) From memory:
I attempted to access several logs: The attempted D command, which returned "invalid diag cmd" and the N8 to access the SMART log. The latter worked, but was blank. I examined the SMART threshholds/data (N5/N6), but nothing stood out.
I attempted to spin-up and spin-down (U and Z), to establish that I was controlling the drive.
When I first connected, I was recieving a different message on CTL-Z. I would see
Code:
No HOST FIS-ReadyStatusFlags 2002A1A5
ASCII Diag mode
I did not see the associated SIM error mentioned at some sites. Based on Univeristy of Google research, I attempted to clear the SMART data (I figured since there wasnt anything interesting in there anyway . . ) with a spin down, spin up, N1 command sequence. The N1 failed, some sites suggested as an alternative a m0,2,2,,,,,22 command, but after looking that command up, I got the idea that it was formatting an area of the drive and I chickened out. At that time I decided I was out of my depth and posted here.