Path: utzoo!yunexus!geac!syntron!jtsv16!uunet!cbmvax!rutgers!mailrus!ames!pasteur!ucbvax!MTUS5.BITNET!MCCABE From: MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st Subject: Dead disk drive (sigh) Message-ID: <8810302242.AA01330@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Date: 30 Oct 88 19:04:00 GMT Article-I.D.: ucbvax.8810302242.AA01330 Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 44 Date: 30 October 88, 13:49:14 EST From: Jim McCabe MCCABE at MTUS5 To: INFO-ATARI16 at SCORE.STANFORD.EDU Subject: Dead disk drive (sigh) Just a few minutes ago my only floppy drive died, or so it seems. For the two years that I've owned it, every so often it would fail to "grab" onto the disk properly. (Meaning that it would spin the disk for a few seconds, and THEN make the characteristic sucking sound that normally occurrs instantly.) I have always assumed that it was the individual disk's fault, but now it seems like it's been the drive's fault all along. Today, I booted up with Flash, and then tried to access the disk so I could read in a macro file. I had put in the wrong disk by accident, so I put my Flash disk back in after it responded with a "file not found" message. The next time I tried it, the drive started to spin, and it never made that familiar sucking sound that usually happens when everything goes okay. Instead, the spinning just sort of winded down and got slower, and the drive kept trying to read the disk (with no success). After trying to reboot, with different disks, my drive still just makes that spinning sound, the light never goes off, and the ST says that the drive is not responding. Since the drive is two years old, I wasn't worried about voiding my warranty and I opened it up. No luck -- the drive parts are very hard to see, and I didn't want to break anything by tugging obstacles out of the way. So, now the cover is back on, the drive is dead, and I'm hoping someone out there has had some experience with this before. I'm assuming that this is being caused by the drive itself, and not the ST's controller circuitry, but maybe it's only wishful thinking. Since I live in Houghton, Michigan, there's nowhere local that I could take the drive for repair. Is there somewhere I could send the drive and have it fixed within a month? Is there some kind of deal like the motherboard-swap done at Atari for disk drives? Jim