Thanks for the reply, the drive is a no show in the bios. The problem occured with two different drives simultaneously, the timing was somewhat ironic given I had ordered a new external drive so I could make backups more frequently. The new drive arrived just days after the old ones went wrong. The Samsung I'm not so bothered about, that was just operating system and programs, the hitachi I had backed up all my CD collection to MP3 on so if I can recover the data, it would save a lot of time plus there are a few documents which wont be in my last backup. I never backed up the MP3 partition simply because a) I had the CDs still but also the amount of space required for backup.
I have been able to find plenty of hard drives with the same model number, but there are variations in part nos etc. I'm wondering if transfering the platter to a drive of a similar model would work. Nothing to lose by trying, aside from the £15 it's cost me 2nd hand, the data certainly isn't worth the expense of data recovery but being a curious sort of chap I have to at least try and recover.
I've ordered a drive of the same model, with the same amount of cynlinders, heads and sectors and am going to make an attempt. I've read up as much as I can in regards to the procedure. Worse case scenario, I will have two useless drives.
I will report my result, beit success or failure with as much detail as I can for others to read.
Thanks again for the response.
Andy
sceggy wrote:
Sounds like you want to dive in at the deep end... to give you some idea of best approach; is the drive seen in BIOS, or is it a "no show". Depending on the drive its not just a matter of swapping the PCB, but the firmware on the drive and PCB all has to be tickety boo..... you could end up swapping the PCB and still have a "no show"...
scegs