cramer@kontron.UUCP (Clayton Cramer) (04/29/86)
Help! I have a 10 Mb CMI hard disk on my PC, mounted in an external cabinet. I also have a DMA controller chip that I don't trust, but because it is soldered in, I haven't replaced it. Anyway, I'm starting to have problems with my disk drive apparently "disappearing" from view of PC-DOS. When I power the system off and then back on, the problem goes away. Finally, last night I using the hard disk and there was a loud "thunk" noise three times in rapid succession. It was loud enough that I jumped back in fear of something attacking me out of the drive. (Yes, I know that's not going to happen, but it was THAT 6oud.) After powering everything off and on again, the disk was still working, and none of my data was lost. Any idea what the "thunk" noise is, and could my flaky DMA controller chip be the guilty party?
o68@psuvm.bitnet.UUCP (05/09/86)
Questions about "THUNK THUNK THUNK" on a flaky hard disk... The "THUNK" noise was a very rapid head seek, probably to the beginning or end of travel. Why? It could have several causes. Usually, the heads get lost and can't find either the cylinder marks (loud thunk) or the end-of-travel marks (louder thunk). I think the heads got out of sync with the controller, i.e. heads on cylinder 200, controller on cylinder 120. I'm not too familiar with how the recovery for this is set up, but some drives will do a Return-To-Zero seek to settle the question. If you have a few things dropping out at once, i.e. a flaky controller board, then the RTZ sensor might not be picking up and you'll get a head slam. These noises are scary, but rather harmless as far as permanent damage goes on a winchester. (On the old CDC Hawk drives, a head slam was sometimes catostrophic. The Forward-End-Of-Travel stop would break off and make many itty-bitty marks all over the disk and anything else it would hit. But I digress...) Now - for the cause: Your DMA chip may be what's doing it, but don't bet your life on it. If the data gets mangled anywhere on its way from disk to memory, it can give a bad cylinder number (most likely it'll say it's on cylinder 0 when it's not, but that isn't the only possibility). Hence, a quick seek to find the proper track again - "THUNK". If the thunk is a head slam, your controller may be what's gone flaky. Check it over for loose connections, push down on the chips to make sure they're seated right. If you are comfortable with socketing chips, you might reseat them while you're at it. Look at all the solder connections real closely - one might not be done right. It's hard to say just what's causing it. Sorry I can't be more help than this. Rest assured, though - your disk probably isn't committing suicide. ---Duck
smithg@kcl-cs.UUCP (Lionel Smith-Gordon) (05/16/86)
In article <5474O68@PSUVMA> o68@psuvm.bitnet.UUCP writes: >The "THUNK" noise was a very rapid head seek, probably to the >beginning or end of travel. Why? It could have several causes. I had these funny noises last week - my hard disk sounded if it had to 'go home' between reading every track/sector/bit/byte(??). I fiddled with the drives ribbon cables and the problem went away... -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | Lionel Smith-Gordon [ N E O N ] smithg@kcl-cs.UUCP | | Kings's College (KQC) Department of Computing | | University of London {ucl-cs ukc}!kcl-cs!smithg | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -