  | | | FC3 and Drive Errors | FC3 and Drive Errors 2006-09-19 - By Bob Kinney
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--- Rick Stevens <rstevens@(protected)> wrote:
> On Mon, 2006-09-18 at 14:04 -0400, mylar wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I am running Fedora Core 3 on a Dell Dimension 4700 desktop. It's a dual > > boot machine. Windows resides on a 80 Gb SATA drive and Linux on a > > regular 200 Gb ATA IDE drive attached to the PATA controller. When > > running FC3 the system has been working fine for well over a year but of > > late has been freezing up every now and then. Everytime it freezes and > > I go over the system logs I am seeing the following drive errors > > occuring just prior to the system crashing... > > > > > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: hdb: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady > > > SeekComplete Error } > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: hdb: dma_intr: error=0x84 > > > { DriveStatusError BadCRC } > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: ide: failed opcode was: unknown > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: hdb: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady > > > SeekComplete Error } > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: hdb: dma_intr: error=0x84 > > > { DriveStatusError BadCRC } > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: ide: failed opcode was: unknown > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: hdb: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady > > > SeekComplete Error } > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: hdb: dma_intr: error=0x84 > > > { DriveStatusError BadCRC } > > > Sep 18 04:02:20 brooklyn kernel: ide: failed opcode was: unknown > > > > Any ideas what might be going on ? Is the drive going bad on me ? > > I am going to doi a check for bad blocks and see what happens. Any other > ideas, > > hints, suggestions would be appreciated. > > Those kinds of errors are usually indicative of a dying drive. You're > receiving CRC errors on the DMA transfers and seek incomplete errors. > > This can also be caused by a dying power supply--particularly the +12VDC > side of things, since that's what's used to turn the spindle and move > the heads. If you have the technical competence and a multimeter, check > the voltages AT THE DRIVE using the meter. You want the +12VDC level at > about 12.7 to 13.0 volts. IIRC, the 12V should be between the black > (ground) and yellow wires on the drive connector. If they're low, you > should think about a new power supply.
I'm not sure I would agree with the voltage figures. We are powering electronics, not charging a battery. The better the power supply, the closer it can maintain *precisely* 12V with less ripple, over a wider range of loads.
A quick google on "pc power supply 12v rail tolerance" turned up an article claiming that the Intel spec for ATX is +/- 5%, or 0.6V on the 12V rail. If you're at 13, you're probably cooking something.
I'd look into that a bit more . . .
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