Larry R Harrison Jr wrote:
> Okay, I'm infamous for my temper--basketball fans, think of Bobby Knight &
> get you get the picture. So, in one of my "moments," I up and flat-out hit
> my computer case with my fist--hard enough to bent the side-panels and even
> cause it to crash to the floor, but no internal damage is apparent. A
> thorough hard drive check in Windows revealed nothing.
>
> How's THAT for an unusual post? Don't see that everyday do you?
>
> Well, it would surely help me I suppose if I put the case in the desk-area
> reserved for it (complete with a closing door), I've shyed from that because
> connecting the cords that way is UNGODLY awkward, plus it's impossible
> obviously to access the innards for expansion--and I am about to add a
> couple of things.
>
> But it would surely make good sense once I've bought the things to put it in
> there for the next few months until I expand it more.
>
> Anyway, I guess I'm asking--if no damage is visible and the hard drive
> error-check came up empty, is it safe to say that--though I don't deserve
> it--that the computer is likely fine and none the worse for any of it? What
> kind of diagnostic checks can (or should) be done to see for sure? Yeah, I
> know--hardly everyone does something like that (I'm an EXTREMELY rare
> breed--thankfully), but I'm sure some may drop a machine accidentally and
> want someway to check diagnostically.
Hard disks can generally take anything from a 30G - 65G shock while
operating, depending on make. When not running they can normally take
somthing around 300G (about 10% of what a flight recorder can take
IIRC). Anyway, if it still works it's probably OK.
> Tips?
Anger management therapy.
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