-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 3:32 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: KX-T: Replacement hard drives for KX-TV100 voice mail system


I have been told that the hard disks wear out every few years on KX-TV100
voice processing systems.
I have just put a KX-TVS100 in and would like to put a couple of spare
hard disks in the room with the
system so that I will not  have to go hunting when one fails.  Does anyone
know where to get appropriate
 unused hard disks and how to format them so they can be popped in when
needed.  I don't want to wait
 two years to get them because by them it may be hard to find such small
logical and large physical
drives.  I am also open to being re-educated on this issue.

Thanks in advance.

Brent
(626) 564-7069
_________________________________________________________________


I was able to clone a disk drive for a KX-TVS75, and I am sure that the
procedure would be applicable to your TVS100. Since your TVS100 is still
working, you already have the hardest thing to come by, which is the essential
firmware on the working drive. You cannot attach a bare drive to the TVSxx and
make it work.

There are a couple of potential problems. First, you may have a hard time
finding new replacement drives. The newer models may not come in the small
capacities that were common with these VPS systems, and the VPS may not
recognize a drive that is too large. The VPS will not use extra capacity in any
case. There is some flexibility in the new drive but I don’t know what
the limitations are. In my case I was able to copy a 300M Toshiba drive to a
1.2G Seagate.

The second problem is that you need to take the VPS apart enough that you can
remove the drive. This is not really very hard but it does require that you are
at least a bit familiar with gear like this for the safety of everyone and
everything concerned.

Third, you need a spare PC, preferably running some form of Unix. It would
really help if the PC's BIOS can recognize the drive, and it probably will
since the older drives were "easier". The call for Unix is because the familiar
DOS utilities will not copy a disk that they don’t recognize. If you
happen to know of a DOS utility that can copy sector by sector without
concerning itself about the filesystem type, then you could use that. The true
guru would call a BIOS routine using DOS debug, but let's assume that anyone
still reading is not of guru status.

Finally, you need an adapter that enables connection of a laptop hard drive to a
standard IDE cable. You also need the standard IDE cable.

The remainder of the procedure is fairly detailed, would you like me to continue
?

George

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