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Conference noted::ibmpc-95

Title:IBM PCs, clones, DOS, etc.
Notice:Intro in 1-11, Windows stuff in NOTED::MSWINDOWS please
Moderator:TARKIN::LINND
Created:Tue Jan 03 1995
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:3023
Total number of notes:28404

2989.0. "HD not recognized by OS" by RICKS::WINDNAGLE () Tue Apr 15 1997 13:01

I just bought a used Quantum 270M hard drive and am having trouble with it.

I put it in a dos 6.22 system and the bios recognized it fine, but DOS couldn't
see it.  That is, I would boot to floppy, type c: and it would respond
with "invalid drive specification".

I tried booting directly from the hard drive and it would give a Win95 message
then ask for a path to a command.com file.  When I put in my dos 6.22 floppy
it said incorrect version of DOS.                                  

So I put it in a Win95 system and again it was recognized fine by the bios
as a 270MB drive, but Win95 recognized it as 2 separate 511MB drives.  The
first drive had a file called drvspc or something like that, which I deleted
because I wanted to get back to a noncompressed drive.  After rebooting, the
two drives still showed up as 2 511MB drives but now the drive names were
strange characters and they had files made up of strange characters.  I ran
format under Win95 and that didn't change the size.  I ran scandisk and it
ran fine through the first half of the drive, then gave an error for every
sector thereafter.  Or at least I assume it would have, it was taking forever.

So I went back to my bios and used it to do a low level format.  Now Win95 won't
recognize it at all, and if I boot from a DOS 5.0 floppy it won't recognize
it either.

I have learned that compressed drive should be uncompressed rather than deleting
the drvspc file.

Any suggestions?

/carl
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
2989.1FABSIX::J_SADINFreedom isn't free.Tue Apr 15 1997 13:125
    
    
    	I don't believe low-level formatting an IDE drive is a good idea...
    
    
2989.2BHAJEE::JAERVINENOra, the Old Rural AmateurTue Apr 15 1997 13:2513
2989.3RICKS::WINDNAGLETue Apr 15 1997 13:356
It's been a while since I used Fdisk, but I thought that DOS had to
know that the drive exists before you can try to do anything to it.

If I type sys c: it just responds with "invalid drive specification"

/carl
2989.4Sounds like you need to formatIROCZ::ALBRIGHTShe bop-he bop-a-we bopTue Apr 15 1997 13:4710
    Having just been through configuring several drives for my new homebrew
    system your problem sounds like your drive has not been formatted even
    though you may see the C: prompt.
    
    The procedure is to go to DOS, use FDISK to partition the drive, and
    then format it, using FORMAT /s if your primary partion will be your C:
    drive and you intend to boot from it.  DO NOT delete the DRVSPACE, or
    any other files DOS choses to put on your drive during formatting.
    
Loren
2989.6WRKSYS::INGRAHAMAndyTue Apr 15 1997 14:157
> It's been a while since I used Fdisk, but I thought that DOS had to
> know that the drive exists before you can try to do anything to it.

It's the other way around.  DOS won't see it until you use FDISK and
FORMAT.

The BIOS must recognize it before you can use FDISK.
2989.7It's..., Utility Time!!!PCBUOA::MCQUADEst*rs = 1x4x9Tue Apr 15 1997 21:3610
    
    	I'm afraid to imagine what an MFM utility does to an IDE drive!
    
    	Quantum use to have a low level format utility AND a disk partition
    utility (for severly munged partition tables..., which is possibly what
    you really needed).  They aren't on the WEB site but they might still
    be up on the BBS.
    
    	
        Kevin
2989.8fdisk and format were correctRICKS::WINDNAGLEWed Apr 16 1997 12:444
Thanks for all the replies.  You were right.  All I needed was fdisk and format.
This disk is fine now.

/carl
2989.9check out www.esc-ca.comTWOTOO::SMITHPWritten but not readWed Apr 16 1997 12:587
    Based on the whats new section at www.esc-ca.com there are a couple of
    ASUS board that support K6 as well as ABIT. 
    
    ESC is a small PC parts house and they are good about putting their RMA
    numbers for boards and chips as well as supply/support issues with PC
    board and chip companies. They dropped TYAN last year because of DOA
    and warranty support issues.