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Chapter Overview . Floppy Disk Drives Hard Disk Drives. The Basics of Floppy Disk Drives . Keeping a Floppy Disk Drive Running. Watch for exposure to environmental conditions and foreign objects. Schedule monthly cleanings. Check the floppy disk first for data errors or write protection.
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Chapter Overview • Floppy Disk Drives • Hard Disk Drives
Keeping a Floppy Disk Drive Running • Watch for exposure to environmental conditions and foreign objects. • Schedule monthly cleanings. • Check the floppy disk first for data errors or write protection. • Check complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) settings. • Check or change the floppy disk drive cable. • Change the floppy disk drive controller. • Replace the floppy disk drive as needed.
Actuator Arms • Hold read/write (R/W) heads in place • Must deliver speed and accuracy • Use one of the following technologies: • The stepper motor (older) had many disadvantages. • The voice coil motor (newer) uses the head for mapping. • Might be damaged by head-to-disk interference (HDI), or head crash
Hard Disk Drive Types • ST-506 • Enhanced Small Device Interface (ESDI) • Integrated Device Electronics/Enhanced Integrated Drive Electronics (IDE/EIDE) • Small Computer System Interface (SCSI)
Installation and Setup: the Five Steps • Physical installation and cabling • CMOS setup • Low-level formatting • Partitioning • High-level formatting
Setting the System CMOS for the Hard Disk Drive–CMOS Main Screen
Setting the System CMOS for the Hard Disk Drive–Hard Drive Setup Screen
Low-Level Formatting • Creates and organizes sectors • Sets the proper interleave • Establishes the boot sector
Preparing the New Drive • Create a bootable disk with formatting utilities. • Create a Microsoft Windows 98 startup disk. • Use the bootable disk to partition and format the new drive.
High-Level Formatting • FORMAT.COM does the following: • Creates and configures the file allocation tables (FATs) • Creates the root directory • The FAT tracks which part of a file is stored on which sector. • FAT32 uses disk space more efficiently.
High-Level Formatting (Cont.) • Consider several factors before using FAT32. • You should not use FAT32 on dual boot systems shared by operating systems (OSs) that do not support FAT32. • FAT32 partitions that are shared can be read across the network. • FAT32 does not support compression. • You should not use disk utilities that are not made for FAT32.
Fragmentation and Compression • A hard disk can become fragmented over time. • MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows 95, Microsoft Windows 98, and Microsoft Windows Me have defragmentation programs. • Disk compression eliminates wasted cluster space.
Maintaining a Hard Disk Drive • Perform comprehensive, regularly scheduled backups. • Save a copy of the boot sector and partition table information. • Have tools on hand for hard disk repairs. • Use only disk tools certified for the hard disk drive and the OS.
Common Errors and Troubleshooting Utilities • Errors • Abort, Retry, Fail • Connectivity problems • Lost boot and partition information • CMOS errors • Utilities • Scandisk • SCSI BIOS disk utility
Chapter Summary • Floppy disk drive technology has changed little over the years. • Floppy disk drives fail more often than any other computer component. • Installing a hard disk drive requires you to partition the drive, set the CMOS settings, and format the drive. • The fdisk utility is used to create partitions. • The geometry (CHS values) of a hard disk drive determines its storage capacity. • Partition types include primary, extended, logical, and active. • The active partition is used to initialize the OS.