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eSATA drive problem

Discussion in 'Windows Vista' started by philo, Sep 16, 2009.

  1. philo

    philo Guest

    Gene E. Bloch wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > On 9/16/09, the entity philo wrote this:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> <snip><!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>>>> I have read that Vista and 7 have available a slightly modified
    >>>>> NTFS that XP or older can't read, but I would expect - and have
    >>>>> experienced - no problems the other way.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Mostly, though, I've only connected my external drives via USB.
    >>>>> Maybe you should try that. Which also makes me wonder - do you have
    >>>>> reason to think that the eSATA port is healthy?
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Once I used eSATA without a problem, but I don't remember which OS
    >>>>> that particular HD was formatted on.
    >>>>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>> The eSATA port is healthy as I experience no problems with XP or Linux.
    >>>
    >>>> I know that NTFS has been modified slightly but my Vista
    >>>> installation is an XP upgrade, so the drive that Vista is on has not
    >>>> been re-formated with the "new" NTFS
    >>>
    >>>> The weirdest part is that Vista and Win7 can run CHKDSK on the eSATA
    >>>> drive and no problems are found
    >>>
    >>> Sorry I couldn't help...
    >>>
    >>> Although - how about the partition status on the external drive? If
    >>> it's set up as a boot drive, Vista and 7 might be skittish about it.
    >>>
    >>> That's the only remaining straw I can grasp at :)
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > <!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> thanks for the reply<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    > <!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> the drive is not a boot drive..data only<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    > <!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> I'd say that if Vista and Win7 cannot read a drive formatted from XP...
    >> there's a problem!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Yes, but I read drives formatted in XP on my Vista machine, so I think
    > the problem is likely to be with your drive or your Vista (or your
    > hardware or drivers), not all XP Drives with all Vistas.
    >
    > I mentioned one possible kind of partition setup, but there are other
    > parameters: primary, secondary, extended, logical, and so forth, which
    > could be a problem. I don't know enough about all this to offer
    > suggestions.
    >
    > There's also encryption.
    >
    > And I think I already asked: did you try using the drive with a USB
    > enclosure or adapter instead of eSATA?
    >
    > And I forgot (it's not in your OP) - have you read other XP NTFS drives
    > in that eSATA port on Vista or 7?
    >
    > The thing is, when I don't know what the problem is, I do a lot of
    > experimentation...
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->



    Yes I am an experimenter and I am not actually going to be using Vista
    or Win7 other then just to learn how they work.

    As I mentioned somewhere...I need to keep current as I do a lot of
    computer repair work and anticipate working on machines with Vista and Win7

    The problem was with the eSATA drive only
    and Win7 has no problems reading an IDE drive that has win2k on it.

    The main thing that is odd it that Win7 cannot read the drive...(sees it
    as RAW)
    yet it *can* run CHKDSK on the drive and sees no problems
     
  2. philo

    philo Guest

    Gene E. Bloch wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > On 9/17/09, the entity Vista Succubus Hunter wrote this:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> Gene E. Bloch wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>>
    >>> And I think I already asked: did you try using the drive with a USB
    >>> enclosure or adapter instead of eSATA?
    >>>
    >>> And I forgot (it's not in your OP) - have you read other XP NTFS
    >>> drives in that eSATA port on Vista or 7?
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    > <!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Scary. I hope the OP investigates this solution before trying it...
    >
    > I say scary because I have no idea where the program refered to on the
    > forum came from, and it seems to write to the drive in question. So I'm
    > glad that I don't have the OP's problem for the moment...
    >
    > But if it ends up working, then thanks, Mr. Hunter...may I call you Mr.
    > Hunter? :)
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    I am not going to do that and risk losing my data (even though I have
    backups)

    However I say that Win7 and Vista should recognize the data on an eSATA
    drive by default and without having to jump through hoops.

    It does recognize the drive, simply not the file system

    unless one runs chkdsk, then it can recognize the file system

    Next time I get a new drive I'll experiment with it though
     
  3. philo

    philo Guest

    Vista Succubus Hunter wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Gene E. Bloch wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> On 9/17/09, the entity Vista Succubus Hunter wrote this:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> Gene E. Bloch wrote:
    >>>>
    >>>> And I think I already asked: did you try using the drive with a USB
    >>>> enclosure or adapter instead of eSATA?
    >>>>
    >>>> And I forgot (it's not in your OP) - have you read other XP NTFS
    >>>> drives in that eSATA port on Vista or 7?
    >>>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >><!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> Scary. I hope the OP investigates this solution before trying it...
    >>
    >> I say scary because I have no idea where the program refered to on the
    >> forum came from, and it seems to write to the drive in question. So
    >> I'm glad that I don't have the OP's problem for the moment...
    >>
    >> But if it ends up working, then thanks, Mr. Hunter...may I call you
    >> Mr. Hunter? :)
    >><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > I have been called a lot of things over the years. [​IMG]
    >
    > Anyway, the site seems reputable, and I view it to be no more dangerous
    > than the Ultimate Boot site, if one happens to be in a pinch.
    >
    > However, the OP while over there in COLA was dogging Vista and Win 7 out
    > saying he was never going to use either one of the O/S(s) anyway with
    > his LOL remarks.
    >
    > Therefore, it's moot point with him. I am only making the posts for
    > others that may face the issue, needing a way out.
    >
    >
    >
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    unplonk

    As I have stated a few times before ==>I do computer repair work so must
    stay current with all the new operating systems out there...
    so it's necessary for me to know as much as possible about Win7 and Vista...

    It's irrelevant whether or not I use Vista or Win7 myself.

    As a matter of fact, if giving advice over the phone (or the net)

    The best thing for me to do is to boot to the OS my "customer" is using
    and I can navigate through not having to rely on my memory.

    Since I have most of my machines using removable drive kits...

    last count , I had about 25 different operating systems spanning my 5
    main machines.

    Yep, I even have a 286 running Windows 1 , 2 , 3.0 and 3.11
     
  4. You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not compatible
    with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware update.


    On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >
    > Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >
    > I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    > as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >
    > Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    > drive and lost all their data.
    >
    > Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    > Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >
    > CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >
    > but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >
    >
    > I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >
    > Problem was identical!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     
  5. philo wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Vista Succubus Hunter wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> Gene E. Bloch wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> On 9/17/09, the entity Vista Succubus Hunter wrote this:
    >>>> Gene E. Bloch wrote:
    >>>>>
    >>>>> And I think I already asked: did you try using the drive with a USB
    >>>>> enclosure or adapter instead of eSATA?
    >>>>>
    >>>>> And I forgot (it's not in your OP) - have you read other XP NTFS
    >>>>> drives in that eSATA port on Vista or 7?
    >>>>>
    >>>
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>
    >>> Scary. I hope the OP investigates this solution before trying it...
    >>>
    >>> I say scary because I have no idea where the program refered to on
    >>> the forum came from, and it seems to write to the drive in question.
    >>> So I'm glad that I don't have the OP's problem for the moment...
    >>>
    >>> But if it ends up working, then thanks, Mr. Hunter...may I call you
    >>> Mr. Hunter? :)
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> I have been called a lot of things over the years. [​IMG]
    >>
    >> Anyway, the site seems reputable, and I view it to be no more
    >> dangerous than the Ultimate Boot site, if one happens to be in a pinch.
    >>
    >> However, the OP while over there in COLA was dogging Vista and Win 7
    >> out saying he was never going to use either one of the O/S(s) anyway
    >> with his LOL remarks.
    >>
    >> Therefore, it's moot point with him. I am only making the posts for
    >> others that may face the issue, needing a way out.
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    >
    > unplonk
    >
    > As I have stated a few times before ==>I do computer repair work so must
    > stay current with all the new operating systems out there...
    > so it's necessary for me to know as much as possible about Win7 and
    > Vista...
    >
    > It's irrelevant whether or not I use Vista or Win7 myself.
    >
    > As a matter of fact, if giving advice over the phone (or the net)
    >
    > The best thing for me to do is to boot to the OS my "customer" is using
    > and I can navigate through not having to rely on my memory.
    >
    > Since I have most of my machines using removable drive kits...
    >
    > last count , I had about 25 different operating systems spanning my 5
    > main machines.
    >
    > Yep, I even have a 286 running Windows 1 , 2 , 3.0 and 3.11
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    LOL, LOL and LOL an *UNPLONK*?
     
  6. philo

    philo Guest

    Vista Succubus Hunter wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > philo wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> Vista Succubus Hunter wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> Gene E. Bloch wrote:
    >>>> On 9/17/09, the entity Vista Succubus Hunter wrote this:
    >>>>> Gene E. Bloch wrote:
    >>>>>>
    >>>>>> And I think I already asked: did you try using the drive with a
    >>>>>> USB enclosure or adapter instead of eSATA?
    >>>>>>
    >>>>>> And I forgot (it's not in your OP) - have you read other XP NTFS
    >>>>>> drives in that eSATA port on Vista or 7?
    >>>>>>
    >>>>
    >>>>>
    >>>>>
    >>>>
    >>>> Scary. I hope the OP investigates this solution before trying it...
    >>>>
    >>>> I say scary because I have no idea where the program refered to on
    >>>> the forum came from, and it seems to write to the drive in question.
    >>>> So I'm glad that I don't have the OP's problem for the moment...
    >>>>
    >>>> But if it ends up working, then thanks, Mr. Hunter...may I call you
    >>>> Mr. Hunter? :)
    >>>>
    >>>
    >>> I have been called a lot of things over the years. [​IMG]
    >>>
    >>> Anyway, the site seems reputable, and I view it to be no more
    >>> dangerous than the Ultimate Boot site, if one happens to be in a pinch.
    >>>
    >>> However, the OP while over there in COLA was dogging Vista and Win 7
    >>> out saying he was never going to use either one of the O/S(s) anyway
    >>> with his LOL remarks.
    >>>
    >>> Therefore, it's moot point with him. I am only making the posts for
    >>> others that may face the issue, needing a way out.
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >>
    >> unplonk
    >>
    >> As I have stated a few times before ==>I do computer repair work so
    >> must stay current with all the new operating systems out there...
    >> so it's necessary for me to know as much as possible about Win7 and
    >> Vista...
    >>
    >> It's irrelevant whether or not I use Vista or Win7 myself.
    >>
    >> As a matter of fact, if giving advice over the phone (or the net)
    >>
    >> The best thing for me to do is to boot to the OS my "customer" is using
    >> and I can navigate through not having to rely on my memory.
    >>
    >> Since I have most of my machines using removable drive kits...
    >>
    >> last count , I had about 25 different operating systems spanning my 5
    >> main machines.
    >>
    >> Yep, I even have a 286 running Windows 1 , 2 , 3.0 and 3.11
    >><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > LOL, LOL and LOL an *UNPLONK*?<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    yep

    I even have a Kaypro running cp/m
     
  7. philo

    philo Guest

    Dominic Payer wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not compatible
    > with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware update.
    >
    >
    > On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >>
    >> Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >>
    >> I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    >> as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >>
    >> Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    >> drive and lost all their data.
    >>
    >> Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    >> Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >>
    >> CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >>
    >> but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >>
    >>
    >> I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >>
    >> Problem was identical!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->



    Hmm

    could very well be...

    at any rate thanks for the advice...maybe the best I've gotten so far
     
  8. philo

    philo Guest

    philo wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Dominic Payer wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not compatible
    >> with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware update.
    >>
    >>
    >> On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >>>
    >>> Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >>>
    >>> I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    >>> as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >>>
    >>> Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    >>> drive and lost all their data.
    >>>
    >>> Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    >>> Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >>>
    >>> CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >>>
    >>> but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >>>
    >>> Problem was identical!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    >
    >
    > Hmm
    >
    > could very well be...
    >
    > at any rate thanks for the advice...maybe the best I've gotten so far<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->



    Went to the mfg website and the enclosure is listed as Vista compliant
    and no firmware updates.

    I also used the USB-2 connection
    but still, Win7 and Vista see the drive as either corrupted or RAW
    "do you want to format this drive?" yikes!!!!

    and again *note* when CHKDSK runs on the drive from Vista or Win7 *no
    problems found*
     
  9. It sounds as if the firmwares and BIOSes are almost, but not quite,
    fully compatible with Vista and each other.

    The current version of the enclosure may be fully compatible with Vista
    but older versions might not be. Enclosures cost too little for there to
    be any firmware updates for them, and there is probably no inbuilt
    routine to do so.

    Check to see what firmware updates there might be for the disk, and
    Google for posts relating to both the enclosure you have and the disk
    model. Others may have had the same problem.

    Are there any BIOS updates for your motherboard? Device compatibility
    can be fixed by BIOS updates resolving undocumented BIOS bugs.


    On 18/09/2009 20:13, philo wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > philo wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> Dominic Payer wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not compatible
    >>> with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware update.
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:
    >>>> I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >>>>
    >>>> Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >>>>
    >>>> I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    >>>> as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >>>>
    >>>> Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    >>>> drive and lost all their data.
    >>>>
    >>>> Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    >>>> Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >>>>
    >>>> CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >>>>
    >>>> but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>> I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >>>>
    >>>> Problem was identical!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >> Hmm
    >>
    >> could very well be...
    >>
    >> at any rate thanks for the advice...maybe the best I've gotten so far<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    >
    >
    > Went to the mfg website and the enclosure is listed as Vista compliant
    > and no firmware updates.
    >
    > I also used the USB-2 connection
    > but still, Win7 and Vista see the drive as either corrupted or RAW
    > "do you want to format this drive?" yikes!!!!
    >
    > and again *note* when CHKDSK runs on the drive from Vista or Win7 *no
    > problems found*<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     
  10. On 9/17/09, the entity Vista Succubus Hunter wrote this:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Gene E. Bloch wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> On 9/17/09, the entity Vista Succubus Hunter wrote this:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> Gene E. Bloch wrote:
    >>>>
    >>>> And I think I already asked: did you try using the drive with a USB
    >>>> enclosure or adapter instead of eSATA?
    >>>>
    >>>> And I forgot (it's not in your OP) - have you read other XP NTFS drives
    >>>> in that eSATA port on Vista or 7?
    >>>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >> <!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> Scary. I hope the OP investigates this solution before trying it...
    >>
    >> I say scary because I have no idea where the program refered to on the
    >> forum came from, and it seems to write to the drive in question. So I'm
    >> glad that I don't have the OP's problem for the moment...
    >>
    >> But if it ends up working, then thanks, Mr. Hunter...may I call you Mr.
    >> Hunter? :)
    >> <!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > I have been called a lot of things over the years. [​IMG]<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Anyway, the site seems reputable, and I view it to be no more dangerous than
    > the Ultimate Boot site, if one happens to be in a pinch.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > However, the OP while over there in COLA was dogging Vista and Win 7 out
    > saying he was never going to use either one of the O/S(s) anyway with his LOL
    > remarks.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Therefore, it's moot point with him. I am only making the posts for others
    > that may face the issue, needing a way out.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Thanks for unscaring me - sort of related to "unplonk" :)

    I'd be happier, though , if you risked your system by trying it for me,
    rather than just saying the site is reputable.

    Yes, that's a joke...But I am serious about the thanks.

    --
    Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com
     
  11. philo

    philo Guest

    Dominic Payer wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > It sounds as if the firmwares and BIOSes are almost, but not quite,
    > fully compatible with Vista and each other.
    >
    > The current version of the enclosure may be fully compatible with Vista
    > but older versions might not be. Enclosures cost too little for there to
    > be any firmware updates for them, and there is probably no inbuilt
    > routine to do so.
    >
    > Check to see what firmware updates there might be for the disk, and
    > Google for posts relating to both the enclosure you have and the disk
    > model. Others may have had the same problem.
    >
    > Are there any BIOS updates for your motherboard? Device compatibility
    > can be fixed by BIOS updates resolving undocumented BIOS bugs.
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Thus far I did not find anything by using Google...
    but I'll see if there is a bios update that addresses the issue

    thanks again

    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > On 18/09/2009 20:13, philo wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> philo wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> Dominic Payer wrote:
    >>>> You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not compatible
    >>>> with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware update.
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>> On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:
    >>>>> I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >>>>>
    >>>>> I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    >>>>> as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    >>>>> drive and lost all their data.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    >>>>> Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >>>>>
    >>>>> but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >>>>>
    >>>>>
    >>>>> I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Problem was identical!
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> Hmm
    >>>
    >>> could very well be...
    >>>
    >>> at any rate thanks for the advice...maybe the best I've gotten so far<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >> Went to the mfg website and the enclosure is listed as Vista compliant
    >> and no firmware updates.
    >>
    >> I also used the USB-2 connection
    >> but still, Win7 and Vista see the drive as either corrupted or RAW
    >> "do you want to format this drive?" yikes!!!!
    >>
    >> and again *note* when CHKDSK runs on the drive from Vista or Win7 *no
    >> problems found*<!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     
  12. John J

    John J Guest

    "philo" <philo@privacy.invalid> wrote in message
    news:h90m5m$did$1@news.eternal-september.org...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > philo wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> Dominic Payer wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not compatible
    >>> with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware update.
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:
    >>>> I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >>>>
    >>>> Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >>>>
    >>>> I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    >>>> as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >>>>
    >>>> Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    >>>> drive and lost all their data.
    >>>>
    >>>> Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    >>>> Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >>>>
    >>>> CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >>>>
    >>>> but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>> I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >>>>
    >>>> Problem was identical!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >> Hmm
    >>
    >> could very well be...
    >>
    >> at any rate thanks for the advice...maybe the best I've gotten so far<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    >
    >
    > Went to the mfg website and the enclosure is listed as Vista compliant
    > and no firmware updates.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    snip >

    Is it possible you've uncovered a bug the mfr'd like to know about, even
    though they state it currently is Vista compatible?

    John
     
  13. philo

    philo Guest

    John J wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > "philo" <philo@privacy.invalid> wrote in message
    > news:h90m5m$did$1@news.eternal-september.org...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> philo wrote:<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> Dominic Payer wrote:
    >>>> You may have an eSATA enclosure with firmware which is not
    >>>> compatible with Vista or Windows 7, or the disk may need a firmware
    >>>> update.
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>> On 16/09/2009 13:42, philo wrote:
    >>>>> I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >>>>>
    >>>>> I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive
    >>>>> as unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    >>>>> drive and lost all their data.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    >>>>> Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >>>>>
    >>>>> but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >>>>>
    >>>>>
    >>>>> I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Problem was identical!
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> Hmm
    >>>
    >>> could very well be...
    >>>
    >>> at any rate thanks for the advice...maybe the best I've gotten so far<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >> Went to the mfg website and the enclosure is listed as Vista compliant
    >> and no firmware updates.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    > snip >
    >
    > Is it possible you've uncovered a bug the mfr'd like to know about, even
    > though they state it currently is Vista compatible?
    >
    > John<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->



    For now I'm going to stop fooling with it before I break it.

    Again: Win7 can run CHKDSK on the drive with no problems
    yet booted to the desktop it sees the drive as unformatted.

    Though the suggestion to check for a BIOS update I though to be a good
    one, if the issue was concerning eSATA

    I did try the USB-2 connection too and got the same problem


    When I have time, I'm going to pop an old SATA drive in the enclosure
    (one that has bad sectors and is expendable)
    then fool with it some more

    thanks all for the replies
     
  14. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "philo" <philo@privacy.invalid> wrote in message
    news:h8qmga$d58$1@news.eternal-september.org...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > I have an eSATA drive formatted NTFS from my XP installation.
    >
    > Drive works fine from either XP or Linux (multi-boot machine)
    >
    > I had previously tried Vista on the machine but it saw the eSATA drive as
    > unformatted. Gave the message "Do you want to format this drive?"
    >
    > Very dangerous as an unknowing person may have actually formatted the
    > drive and lost all their data.
    >
    > Interestingly enough, any time I've tried to access the drive,
    > Vista ran a chkdsk on it at the next boot up.
    >
    > CHKDSK from Vista saw it fine and reported no errors
    >
    > but could not read the drive once booted to the desktop.
    >
    >
    > I eventually gave up on Vista and just did a Win7 install yesterday.
    >
    > Problem was identical!<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    I think you should copy data off the drive and recreate the partition under
    Vista or 7. If it works fine after that, then probably the partition was
    created using a third party partition software that Vista and 7 no longer
    recognizes.



    Why did Microsoft name Windows after Vista, 7? VII is short for Vista II.
    :)
     

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