Formatting a hard drive

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

Hi
I have a problem with the second hard drive that I have installed on my computer. It is a 12GB Quantum Fireball and is set up as a slave to a 8.4GB Seagate V8

Since re-installing Windows 2000 Professional, the slave drive has become inaccessible. When clicking on it in Windows Explorer, it makes a few noises then states: 'The disk in drive E: is not formatted. Do you want to format it now?'. After clicking yes (I am happy to lose the files on this drive) it makes more noises then tells me 'The E: drive cannot be formatted'

When trying to access it via the Command Prompt, I get the 'data error (cyclic redundancy check)' error message

Does anybody know what I can do to start using the slave drive again

Thanks for any help
Tom
 
What does Disk Management have to say about it?

--
Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect


:
| Hi,
| I have a problem with the second hard drive that I have installed on my
computer. It is a 12GB Quantum Fireball and is set up as a slave to a 8.4GB
Seagate V8.
|
| Since re-installing Windows 2000 Professional, the slave drive has become
inaccessible. When clicking on it in Windows Explorer, it makes a few noises
then states: 'The disk in drive E: is not formatted. Do you want to format
it now?'. After clicking yes (I am happy to lose the files on this drive) it
makes more noises then tells me 'The E: drive cannot be formatted'.
|
| When trying to access it via the Command Prompt, I get the 'data error
(cyclic redundancy check)' error message.
|
| Does anybody know what I can do to start using the slave drive again?
|
| Thanks for any help,
| Tom
 
Has it been partitioned and formatted?

--
Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect


:
| Hi, Disk Management says the following:
|
| Volume: C (this is the good drive)
| Layout: Partition
| Type: Basic
| File System: FAT32
| Status: Healthy (system)
| Capacity: 7.85GB
| Free space: 19 MB
| % Free: 0%
| Fault tolerance: No
| Overhead: 0%
|
| Volume: E (the hard disk that I can't access)
| Layout: Partition
| Type: Basic
| File System: (this is blank)
| Status: Healthy (active)
| Capacity: 11.87GB
| Free space: 11.87GB
| % Free: 110%
| Fault tolerance: No
| Overhead: 0%
 
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