I would also get the power supply checked out, to me (without
opening the box) I would say it is suffering, and is not providing
the grunt it needs to start, if the HDD you are running is an older
one (more than 2-3 years) the bearings will be wearing and the
grease starts to go hard when cold, trying to get them to spin up
with a PSU that is not in good shape can take a few tries (alot of
IBM eng's will know this one from the old days of spinning up HDD's
that had not been used in months, sometimes you would have to
physically spin the drive with no platters by hand about 20 -30
revolutions just to get it to run ;(
ah that takes me back to the old days of the other Apple "SE" the SE
30... they also had hard disks that used to suffer from a similar
complaint - both mine and the ones at work once they got on in the
years would often need to be perched up on a gas lift chair and then
you'd spin the chair as rapidly as you'd dare and after a couple of
revolutions quickly and forcefully grab SE and (obviously) stop it
from spinning, then put back on the desk and boot it up...
tell that to kids these days and will they belive you? ........
--
~
Mark Secker [EMAIL PROTECTED]
9380 2308 (GSE) 9380 1855 (ECEL)
ECEL Computer Support Officer, University of Western Australia.
CRICOS Provider No. 00126G
~
"Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose
sight of the shore."
Andre Gide
"Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving
safely in one pretty and well preserved piece, but to skid across
the line broadside, thoroughly used up, worn out, leaking oil,
shouting GERONIMO"
Hunter S Thompson(?)