01-01-2004
You're posting here and you need a computer to do that. Maybe you can disconnect the c drive from the screwed-up system and install it as a d or e drive in your good system.
Or if you can burn a cd, you can boot from that.
Or you can install a new drive in your screwed-up system and put an os on that and repair the bad drive.
Or you can contact QueTek and let them walk you through an evaluation.
Or you can take the screwed up system to a data recovery company. I'll bet you can find someone to recover the drive for less than $1000. The prices for data recovery have dropped over the past few years for cases where no hardware damage is present.
Buying a floppy may be an option too, but you will use that floppy maybe once a year. Floppies are getting mighty close to punched cards and paper tape. Old formats may never die, but they do fade to insignificance. If you don't have a cd burner, you might want to buy that instead. You will use a cd burner much more than once a year. And I'm not sure if you can fit a data recovery tool on a bootable floppy. But sure that you have a viable plan for that floppy drive.
Hmmm...the last time I backed up the C drive on this laptop I'm using was 12/08/03. Guess I better do another one this weekend. I'd hate to lose a couple of bookmarks or something.
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volcheck(1) User Commands volcheck(1)
NAME
volcheck - checks for media in a drive and by default checks all floppy media
SYNOPSIS
volcheck [-v] [-i secs] [-t secs] pathname
DESCRIPTION
The volcheck utility tells Volume Management to look at each dev/pathname in sequence and determine if new media has been inserted in the
drive.
The default action is to volcheck all checkable media managed by volume management.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-i secs Set the frequency of device checking to secs seconds. The default is 2 seconds. The minimum frequency is 1 second.
-t secs Check the named device(s) for the next secs seconds. The maximum number of seconds allowed is 28800, which is 8 hours. The fre-
quency of checking is specified by -i. There is no default total time.
-v Verbose.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
pathname The path name of a media device.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample of the volcheck command.
The following example
example% volcheck -v /dev/diskette
/dev/diskette has media
asks Volume Management to examine the floppy drive for new media.
The following example
example% volcheck -i 2 -t 600 /dev/diskette1 &
asks Volume Management if there is a floppy in the floppy drive every 2 seconds for 600 seconds (10 minutes).
FILES
/dev/volctl Volume Management control port
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWvolu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO
eject(1), volcancel(1), volmissing(1) rmmount(1M), vold(1M), rmmount.conf(4), vold.conf(4), attributes(5), volfs(7FS)
WARNINGS
Due to a hardware limitation in many floppy drives, the act of checking for media causes mechanical action in the floppy drive. Continu-
ous polling of the floppy drive will cause the drive to wear out. It is recommended that polling the drive only be performed during periods
of high use.
SunOS 5.10 21 Feb 1997 volcheck(1)