sqzdog Posted November 28, 2005 Share Posted November 28, 2005 Pardon me if I have posted in the wrong forum. I am new here. I have a computer that's board is fried and I removed the hard drive. The fried computer was running XP. I placed the HD in a USB 2.0 enclosure, but my working computer won't detect it. Is it because the drive is NTFS? How do I get the data off of this drive?Thanks in advance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cluberti Posted November 28, 2005 Share Posted November 28, 2005 (edited) Is it listed in the Disk Management section of "Computer Management"? If it's listed there, you may just have to initialize the drive (or you won't see it). If it's not there, then some further troubleshooting needs to be done. Edited November 28, 2005 by cluberti Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrChris Posted November 28, 2005 Share Posted November 28, 2005 Well first and formost we would need to know a little about the drive and how you are plugging it into the new system. As well as what do you mean when you say "I have a computer that's board is fried" Are you talking about the Hard Drive controler on the Mobo, the Hard Drive Controler on the Drive itsself, or the mobo in the old system? Also what type of drive is it? IDE/SATA/SCSI/MFM/RLL/USB ect..... Also what type of format/file system is on the drive in question? It would help if you could be a little more helpful on some details,MrChris Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sqzdog Posted November 28, 2005 Author Share Posted November 28, 2005 (edited) The CPU in the computer that this drive came out of fried. The drive I am trying to read has WIndows XP on it. It is a West. Dig. WD400 40gig.I put it in a USB 2.0 external hard drive enclosure and am trying to access it through USB from an XP machine. Edited November 28, 2005 by sqzdog Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pmshah Posted November 29, 2005 Share Posted November 29, 2005 Before the drive is detected the enclosure must be detected. I have come across a number of situations where USB 1.1 & USB 2.0 compatibility issues arise & you have to disable the Enhanced USB Host adapter in Device Manager. Is the new machine you are connecting the USB drive to fast enough? USB will only allow 10% resources for any thing you might want to do on USB connections. It may a while before the drive is accessed, detected, configured & made available. In fact on an XP machine it may just keep playing hide n seek. USB is an extremely poor cousin to firewire.I had to resort to USB enclosure to access a drive which was not fully supported by the mobo bios. I was miserable with it. Finally I attached it to a machine which supported the size fully. Configured it the way I wanted it. Transferred it back to the original machine. Set the bios for the drive to none. Now I have no problems with it. The individual OSes (Win 2k, XP, Linux) can access the drive properly. Only thing I can't do is access it at intial boot manger/ bios level. I can even access it from WinME + Acronis Mount All utility. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sqzdog Posted November 29, 2005 Author Share Posted November 29, 2005 Ok, if I want to add this drive to an existing machine that already has a hard drive with win XP on its primary hard drive, how would I do it? I tried it some time ago and it screwed up the boot file. My preference is to be able to place is as a slave in an existing machine instead of using it in the external enclosure. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tosk Posted November 29, 2005 Share Posted November 29, 2005 Jumper your existing drive (in the working machine) as the master and the one from the busted machine as slave, then connect both to the primary IDE channel. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sqzdog Posted November 29, 2005 Author Share Posted November 29, 2005 (edited) I did that and the other one isn't showing. Any ideas? The are both connected to the same cable. Do I need to do anything in the BIOS? Edited November 29, 2005 by sqzdog Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KAndle Posted November 29, 2005 Share Posted November 29, 2005 (edited) What jumper settings are you using with the USB. I do this freq. Remove the jumpers. It's not a master or a slave. That might help unless the drive controller is fried. I use a Windows 2000 machine for data recovery though. It's always worked better for me. Edited November 29, 2005 by KAndle Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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