Hi, has anybody here clue about scsi drives? One of my IBM ultrastars doesn't work anymore. When the controller is checking the bus it detects it's name but spits out a message 'request failed'. What to do? There's some important data on it
SCSI HD problem
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Stay away from IBM drives. They are 'by far' the lowest quality scsi drives. Professional help may be able to recover your data, but that will be expensive.Comment
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Ontrack.com
I have had to send 2 IBM SCSI drives to them to retrieve data.
This will not be cheap. But they are the best and will retrieve the data.
Rules for dealing with Ontrack:
Lube anal cavity With High Grade Lube (they do not provide this thier lube has sand and halapieno juice added)
Bend over and grasp both ankles (Give as much room as needed this is going to hurt)
The last hard drive I had recovered by them was 4 grand. Payment in full up front of course and no guarantee that they will retrieve Jack. But they have never failed me.Comment
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$4000??! How much GB did they recover? That's a ripoff nevertheless.Originally posted by JFPdude
Ontrack.com
I have had to send 2 IBM SCSI drives to them to retrieve data.
This will not be cheap. But they are the best and will retrieve the data.
Rules for dealing with Ontrack:
Lube anal cavity With High Grade Lube (they do not provide this thier lube has sand and halapieno juice added)
Bend over and grasp both ankles (Give as much room as needed this is going to hurt)
The last hard drive I had recovered by them was 4 grand. Payment in full up front of course and no guarantee that they will retrieve Jack. But they have never failed me.<font color="#FFFFFF" size="2" face="Verdana">This thread will self-destruct in 5 seconds.</font><font color="#FFFFFF" face="Verdana"><br>
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nah, it's not the controller... the other three are still running fine. And if tested the damaged HD on another controler with another cable...
And yes.. you can hear it spinning up. The controller detects the drive but says 'request failed' and that's it. Nothing more... but a good hint with IBM site... hopefully I find that tool there, lol
thanks guysComment
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So what is better than IBM Mr. guy?
Theres a reason most HUGE arrays I've worked with/seen have used IBM.
Seagate is good too, but failure rates are pretty much the same and seagate does cost more.
Treat drives as things that *are* going to fail, it's just a matter of when. The whole moving parts is bad thing.
In any case, I've had great luck with IBM drives, Aside from some DoA SCSI drives I've actually not had one fail in probably 100+ years of run-time (i.e. 100 drives x 1yr)
Can't say the same for micropolis, quantum, and seagate. Just luck though, I know.
-PhilComment



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