Noisy Hard Drive on Bootup using XP

N

namurt

I Have a Pentium PC and have had a HD failure. Prior to failing the
drive had excessive head movement on bootup.

As I had a second PC not in use I changed the hard drive which was
quite on the second PC. but is also acting in the same way on this
one.

After bootup no problems.

Has anyone got any ideas what the cause is and how to stop it.

Regards

Namurt
 
M

meerkat

namurt said:
I Have a Pentium PC and have had a HD failure. Prior to failing the
drive had excessive head movement on bootup.

As I had a second PC not in use I changed the hard drive which was
quite on the second PC. but is also acting in the same way on this
one.

After bootup no problems.

Has anyone got any ideas what the cause is and how to stop it.
Only happens during bootup ?.
Some software polling the hard drive ?.
The drive needs defragging ?.
 
N

namurt

Only happens during bootup ?.
Some software polling the hard drive ?.
The drive needs defragging ?.

Thank You

Drive is partioned C: and D: D: needs defragging C: reports that it
doesn't.

Have defragged both in the past with no difference.

Only software that may be polling it is Ghost or Anti Virus software
if in fact they do.

Have another prob which may throw some light on it.

PC will not power down without removing power. It simply reboots
itself.

Any other ideas would be appreciated.

Thanks Again

Namurt
 
J

John A

namurt said:
I Have a Pentium PC and have had a HD failure. Prior to failing the
drive had excessive head movement on bootup.

As I had a second PC not in use I changed the hard drive which was
quite on the second PC. but is also acting in the same way on this
one.

After bootup no problems.

Has anyone got any ideas what the cause is and how to stop it.

Regards

Namurt

How much RAM is fitted to each machine? A lot of drive action is often an
indicator of insufficient RAM.
 
M

meerkat

namurt said:
Thank You

Drive is partioned C: and D: D: needs defragging C: reports that it
doesn't.

Have defragged both in the past with no difference.

Only software that may be polling it is Ghost or Anti Virus software
if in fact they do.

Have another prob which may throw some light on it.

PC will not power down without removing power. It simply reboots
itself.
Check the Event Viewer for errors.
 
H

happymac.support

I Have a Pentium PC and have had a HD failure. Prior to failing the
drive had excessive head movement on bootup.

As I had a second PC not in use I changed the hard drive which was
quite on the second PC. but is also acting in the same way on this
one.

After bootup no problems.

Has anyone got any ideas what the cause is and how to stop it.

Regards

Namurt


Just in case to see if this drive is failing too, use a utility to
check the SMART status, if the drive supports it. Th utility I would
recommend is SpeedFan
 
N

namurt

Just in case to see if thisdriveis failing too, use a utility to
check the SMART status, if thedrivesupports it. Th utility I would
recommend is SpeedFan

Thank you but how do I do this

Regards

Nanmurt
 
H

happymac.support

Thank you but how do I do this

Regards

Nanmurt

OK, Download SpeedFan (http://www.almico.com/speedfan432.exe). Install
the program. Now run the program (just wait while SpeedFan reads the
computers bus, etc.). When SpeedFan is done initializing, gon the the
"S.M.A.R.T" tab. Now, from the drop down menu, choose your hard drive.
The utility will scan the hard drive and will list the model and
firmware. Now click the "Perform an in-depth online analysis of this
hard disk" button. It will open your browser and take you to a page.
Scroll down to the middle of the page where there is a chart. As long
as every attribute says "Normal" or better "Very good", you HD is OK.
Right below the chart, it will summarize the hard disk's health. If it
says something like "All of the attributes of your hard disk have
normal values. This is good.", then the hard drive's health should be
OK.

Hope this helps
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top