Posted on 11/23/2004 6:10:21 AM PST by ladtx
Need some help from our resident computer experts.
My computer died last night. The hard drive started making a racket and the thing locked up, so I'm 100% sure it's a mechanical problem with the drive. I know physically changing the drive is easy but then configuring it could be a real bear.
My question is how big of a problem is it to get the thing back up and running again? It's a 3-4 year old Gateway given to me by my son when he bought a Dell notebook. It has a good lcd monitor, would I be better off just going out and buying a new CPU?
Ping.
After 4 years buy new.
Just install your most recent backup hard drive and go about your business. You do have backups, don't you?
If your computer died, how did you post this? Troll. KIDDING!
I would just go out a get a new one. After three or four years it just is not worth it to fix.
As for replacing the drive. Pretty much all you have to do is put it in the computer, replacing the old one, and power on. You WILL have to reinstall Windows though.
"It's a 3-4 year old Gateway given to me by my son when he bought a Dell notebook."
Ditch it, there are some really nice one's out there dirt cheap these days and you could spend half of what one of those costs and a bunch of time just to get the outdated one you have up and running again.
Unless of course you're the kind that likes to tinker with things just for the fun of it. If that's the case have fun.
Buy new HDD. Set jumper to "Master". Install new HDD at far end of ribbon cable.
You could aslo set the old HDD as "slave" with the new one as master and possibly copy files from old to new if the old HDD isn't too far gone.
If you can afford to, buy new. That four year old Gateway will make a fine doorstop. Check the Thanksgiving ads. There's bound to be some near giveaways as doorbusters.
Mine died earlier this year. It made a clicking noise and then refused to come on. My 23 year old son installed a new one for me, but I lost all my photos that were on that drive. I don't care about anything else that was on it. I kept it hoping that some day I can retrieve the photos. It is nice having a computer wizard for a son!!!!!
If you've got the restoration CD that Gateway sends with each box, just buy a new hard drive. Buy two & use one as a backup.
If you DON'T have the CD, you'll spend several hours configuring a replacement hard drive, then using the computer you're on now to track down drivers for all the boards, then you'll have to download them onto floppy & carry them over to the dead box. Not worth it, unless you're long on time & short on cash.
Personally, I would buy new, but it is simple to replace the drive. I would suggest leaving the old drive in and making it slave and the new drive the master.
Most new drives come with a floppy that allows you to install the drive, partition it (if you wish), format it and transfer the contents of another drive to the new drive, so you might be able to retain your old programs.
But with a new computer you will have the latest OS, a larger hd and probably dvd burner along with a much faster computer. And you can still install the old hd and try to transfer files from it to the new drive.
If you can afford it, it's always better to buy new. As long as you have saved your files and settings you are fine. And if you haven't, there's no way to recover them from a dead drive anyway.
I just disconnect the cd temporarily & use that for the slave - no messing around with those tiny little jumpers.
I back up my family photos to DVD or CD every month and keep a copy away from the house. That's about the only thing on my computer than can't be replaced, and as cheap as blank discs are, it's silly not to protect 'em.
Put all your pictures on CDs or floppies.
Also I found out that getting prints made at Wal Mart is just as cheap as, maybe cheaper than doing it on your own printer.
4x6 prints for 26 cents.
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