if u r hard drive is really a culprit then ve it replace as soon as possible now for checking that ur one is a culprit or not try the windows utilty or try something from the manufecturer's site they must ve something to tell u that its fine or not.
good luck!!!
2007-02-16 06:57:18
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answer #1
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answered by tanan_nen 3
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hard drives make noise because of the nature of their construction,however some noises are fine some not
for example,a grinding or whirring noise can signify a warped disk platter,this is the metal disk that spins and contains all the data,although annoying this dosent cause much of a problem
a clicking noise is a serious problem,this is the hard drives arm that is going from side to side and this can signify a hard drive failure,but not allways
if the noise is becoming unbearable ,change your drive,they are so cheap these days,you can pick up a 120gb hdd for less than £50 these days
good luck
2007-02-16 08:01:46
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answer #2
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answered by brianthesnail123 7
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Well, it depends. a little noise is normal. but there could be different reasons behind the noise you are hearing. sometimes it is the arm that touches the disk. years ago i lost my hard drive to that. i didnt know where the noise was coming from, and didnt fix it until the arm broke and i lost all my data! if you have a secondary hard drive (Slave drive) and you dont use the data on it for a while (like an hour) it automatically goes on stand-by and once you want to start using it, there is a little noise while it starts spinning again. but that noise is also normal. try to make partitions on your hard disk, don't put too much data on them (like if you have an 80 GB drive, dont store 78 GB on it) always make hard copies (cd's and dvd's) and you should be fine, even in the case of a problem.
2007-02-16 06:52:54
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answer #3
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answered by Mohammad 3
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More frequently, you will find that your hard disk is not the culprit. Most rattling, whining, or whirring noises come from the ventilation fan; usually because the bearings are going bad and the fan needs to be replaced.
If, however, your hard disk is actually the problem, you need to make plans to buy a new hard drive. Hard drives have a limited life span and the price you pay to fix one is often very close to what it would be to upgrade to a larger hard drive.
2007-02-16 06:44:11
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answer #4
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answered by Paul 2
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Four things
1) Normal
2) Disk is fragmeted causing the disk read heads to rapidly move around to read files.
Run check disk "both options"
Run "disk cleanup"
Defragment your hard disk.
3) You do not have enough memory making windows read and write to the disk excessively. Add more memory / reduce the number of programs running in the background.
4) Your disk is failing
Just to be safe back up your data.
2007-02-16 07:53:51
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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How approximately an answer that works.... (If everybody tells you to bypass to Vista then ask them in the event that they like cake until eventually now it incredibly is baked...) I published this until eventually now, because it incredibly is a properly-enjoyed situation that has a touch easy answer. decrease back up your confusing rigidity first , in basic terms in case. setting up your motherboard. devoid of booting it with your existirng rigidity, put in the XP cd, Boot it and do a 2nd point restore (no longer the 1st 'R', the only which will come once you tell it to place in XP. it is going to see your previous device and ask you in case you prefer to repair it. Say specific) . this might replace all the HAL code and living house windows drivers, with the microsoft saved equivalents for the hot board. it is going to then rebuild XP for the hot motherboard. All issues being ok, you land up with your device without copying or loss of put in courses. After it boots the hot XP environment, setting up the motherboard chipset and drivers disk that got here with the motherboard, and run living house windows replace for all something. Works super, and the stated way. you would be asked to re-check in your XP , by using fact the hot MB will null your latest licence. in basic terms run the activation with the help of potential of cyber web (with any luck, MS put in a properly matched ethernet motive force to allow you to are trying this, or you're able to positioned a telephone call)
2016-09-29 05:06:30
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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Hard drives make noise. THey spin. If it is making knocking sounds, That means the disk is out of alignment, get it fixed.
2007-02-16 06:41:35
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answer #7
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answered by snoboarder2k6 3
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all make a small amount of noise but it can be the arm that reads all writes data. It may be touching the disc, that arm was never meant to touch the disc that contains data, its magnetic.
2007-02-16 06:40:57
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answer #8
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answered by CPU 3
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Just in case it is advance warning of a physical disc failure - back up your data to floppy discs, pen drive, CD or DVD ... now!
2007-02-16 10:03:16
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answer #9
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answered by Stephen L 7
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Nothing most likely
2007-02-16 06:55:45
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answer #10
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answered by Daniel N 3
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