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Hard drive on fire!

Started by Invert, January 06, 2005, 04:39 PM

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Invert

Last night my entire block lost power for about 3 hours. My computer was on when the power went out so what I did was turn the power strip switch off (to be extra safe) while the power was out so when it came back on it would not cause a surge through my computer.

After the power came back on I turned the power strip on (It has a built in surge protection) and proceeded to turn the computer on, the computer went on for about 2 seconds and turned off right away.

As soon as that happened I began to smell burning plastic and saw smoke come out of the case, I opened the case and saw that the HD was the thing that was smoking I took it out and saw that there was a chip that was totally burned on the chip board.

I called the manufacturer and asked if they can replace that because I don't want to lose all the information on there but they told me that they don't make that model so I can't even buy the same drive and take the new board off to replace the old one.

I don't want to pay one of those data recovery companies because the data on there was not extremely important and that I had most of the important stuff backed up.

The moral of this story is: back up all your dada!
Have a nice day.

muert0

Is there coverage from the company that makes your surge protector? Maybe it's the fault of the protector and they are responsible for recovering the data.
To lazy for slackware.

quasi-modo

Yes, most surge protectos have a guarantee and if you save the receipt they will pay for what ever is lost generally, sometimes some more for inconveiniance. I always save my surge protector receipts.

I am not sure how you are going to be able to recover that information. I just hope the disks were not corrupted. If they were it is very expencive to get a data recovery firm to load that junk onto a new drive. I forgot what it was, but it was several hundred per mb from what I heard.
WAR EAGLE!
Quote(00:04:08) zdv17: yeah i quit doing that stuff cause it jacked up the power bill too much
(00:04:19) nick is a turtle: Right now im not paying the power bill though
(00:04:33) nick is a turtle: if i had to pay the electric bill
(00:04:47) nick is a turtle: id hibernate when i go to class
(00:04:57) nick is a turtle: or at least when i go to sleep
(00:08:50) zdv17: hibernating in class is cool.. esp. when you leave a drool puddle

Invert

No, this surge protector is older than Grok. The funny thing is that I have a new one and I did not use it. It has lights that tell me if the protection is on if ground is on and it even has an Audible Alarm. Too late now.

Oh and I have never saved a receipts from one of them.

Falcon[anti-yL]


Thing

Look on ebay for a drive that matches.
Replace the board with the one from the ebay drive.
Put the burned board on the ebay drive.
RMA that sucker to the manufacturer.
Drink a beer and kick back playing WoW.

I've done this twice and I think Grok has done it once.
That sucking sound you hear is my bandwidth.

tA-Kane

#6
Quote from: Invert on January 06, 2005, 06:45 PM
No, this surge protector is older than Grok. The funny thing is that I have a new one and I did not use it.
This is a bad thing. I heard surge protectors have an effective lifespan of about a year in most situations. To protect from surges, they use some sort of resister or something that gets burned up when the surge occurs, and in most cases, you get small surges every day that'll use up a little bit of that. Once it's all burned up, you have no more surge protection. If this is true, then a surge protector that is "older than Grok" would most likely be completely ineffective.

Quote from: Thing on January 06, 2005, 08:01 PMRMA that sucker to the manufacturer.
What's RMA? Google comes up with quite a few different answers...  :(
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muert0

To lazy for slackware.

WoOdTroll

I put all my important toys in my website file manager. So I can just use my ftp and get it later.

Newby

I've got no dada to back up. Damnit. :(
- Newby

Quote[17:32:45] * xar sets mode: -oooooooooo algorithm ban chris cipher newby stdio TehUser tnarongi|away vursed warz
[17:32:54] * xar sets mode: +o newby
[17:32:58] <xar> new rule
[17:33:02] <xar> me and newby rule all

Quote<TehUser> Man, I can't get Xorg to work properly.  This sucks.
<torque> you should probably kill yourself
<TehUser> I think I will.  Thanks, torque.

Archonist

#10
Quote from: Newby on January 07, 2005, 06:19 PM
I've got no dada to back up. Damnit. :(

You've got 37GB of music though. That'd suck to re-download.

Newby

And that is the reason I need money for an external hard drive. ;)
- Newby

Quote[17:32:45] * xar sets mode: -oooooooooo algorithm ban chris cipher newby stdio TehUser tnarongi|away vursed warz
[17:32:54] * xar sets mode: +o newby
[17:32:58] <xar> new rule
[17:33:02] <xar> me and newby rule all

Quote<TehUser> Man, I can't get Xorg to work properly.  This sucks.
<torque> you should probably kill yourself
<TehUser> I think I will.  Thanks, torque.

j0k3r

Quote from: krazed on January 08, 2005, 10:17 PM
Quote from: Newby on January 07, 2005, 06:19 PM
I've got no dada to back up. Damnit. :(

You've got 37GB of music though. That'd suck to re-download.
Music is the easiest thing to replace, I'd hate to lose 37GB of personal files and programs.
QuoteAnyone attempting to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of course, living in a state of sin
John Vo