I had the same problem with those same drives, I was going to try lowlevel formating, but the vendor who sold me the systems recomended replacing the dirves as they were in warrenty, so I never had the chance to try it out. Anyway, my advice would be replace that drive if you can ('cause they're no good) and if you can't contact samsung for a lowlevel format utility
R. >>> Guilherme Soares Zahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 08/16/99 10:44AM >>> Hi there, I think this is 1/2 OT, but as I could think of nowhere else to ask... ;-) I needed some tool to diagnose a VFAT (FAT32) partition from inside Linux... The reason why I want to do so is that all the tools I've tried to use from inside DOS/WIN refuse to run properly (it seems there's some rather serious problem with my 4.3Gb Samsung UDMA2 IDE HD, and as far as I can tell it seems to 'freeze' when trying to read some sector - at least from DOS/WIN - generating 'stack overflow' messages)... Anyway, I sort of thought (wondered? hoped? dreamed?) that maybe if the diagnostic tool was running from Linux it might be possible to overcome this problem (maybe just a slight difference on the way Linux accesses the HD, or some fine-tuning on hwclock's settings, could do the trick)... TIA, Guilherme Zahn -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null