Greetings All,
My first post here because I'm not sure where else to go. I am an 8-year MCSE with a network security background.
I have a Dell Precision Workstation 370:
- P4 3.2 HT
- 2GB RAM
- 1 x 80GB WD (OEM)
- 1 x 250GB Seagate (aftermarket, non-RAID obviously)
- 256MB nVidia 6800GS PCI-Ex (aftermarket)
- Windows XP Pro SP2
I was sold an older P-2 400mHz IBM Thinkpad from an ex-employer that was selling them to us for dirt cheap in order to get rid of the old and make way for the new. I finally got around to fiddling with the thing and I realized that its BIOS was locked with a password at the systems level, and I was unsuccessful in trying to get it unlocked to that level (although I got it unlocked to the user level, which is useless).
I had an IDE cable that allowed for a laptop HD to be placed into a desktop IDE port, with a power connector. I plugged this into the laptop's hard drive to try and format it from my Precision 370 since the laptop had no floppy drive and I was unsuccessful in getting it to boot from an external source (i.e. external floppy, USB key, etc.). After connecting the laptop hard drive to my 370, I booted the system. The system went through the POST phase just fine, but then a quick flash of "NTDETECT failed" came on the screen and the system rebooted. This has been the case now since Friday afternoon when I first started this idiotic procedure (quite possibly the dumbest thing I've tried to date).
I have the feeling that this IBM Thinkpad-BIOS-Locked hard drive has locked down my system's devices and quite possibly the motherboard, although I have evidence that proves quite to the contrary, which is strange.
First off, I removed the damnable laptop hard drive and re-installed my CD-RW and DVD-ROM drives. Then I rebooted, and still the "NTDETECT failed" message flickered across the screen and the system rebooted immediately.
I tried to boot into Safe Mode, and the Safe Mode screen comes up when I punch F8 after POST, but any selection made here to move forward results in the "NTDETECT Failed" message. I tried to run Windows Recovery and was told by Windows Setup that it could not detect any hard drives on my system, with "press F3 to exit" being my only option. I tried using a brand new 250GB Seagate (out of the box brand new) hard drive and that was also not detected. I tried a Windows XP boot disk, and the system simply will not boot from the disk. I tried the boot disk in another machine and it worked fine. I ran several Dell Diagnostics Tests, all with passing results. As far as I have ever known, Windows XP supports setup to SATA drives without the need of loading device drivers. When I try to load SATA device drivers at Windows XP Setup by pressing F6, Windows Setup just keeps asking me to insert the manufacturer's driver disk into the floppy drive, regardless of whether or not the disk is loaded into the floppy drive. I tested that disk and it worked fine another system. I took the floppy out and replaced it with a brand new one, out of the box. No good, same results. I put the floppy form my 370 into my test system, and it worked like a charm. So it isn't a bad floppy. I'm now thinking that something security-related has gotten embedded into my motherboard somehow.
I am on the latest available BIOS version for my 370, which is A07. I cleared out the BIOS by shorting the pins, and it cleared successfully. I even removed the battery, which I don't even think is necessary anymore, but I did it anyway. No good, still same results across the board. Funny thing is, I am able to boot from CD-ROM using both my Dell-supplied WinXP Pro SP1 OS disk and from my personal WinXP Pro disk (non-OEM, store-bought). Just that every time I do boot form CD-ROM, I am not able to go any further due to the OS not recognizing any SATA drives.
Things I have NOT tried yet:
- Booting from CD-ROM with an IDE hard drive as opposed to SATA
- Plugging my 80GB and 250GB hard drives into a SATA-capable system and attempting to access the data on them that way (and then promptly moving it to an external source before anything ELSE happens)
At this point I am at a loss, with the exceptions of what I have not tried as of yet. Unfortunately I haven't the resources to try either of those things, for I have no other system that is SATA-capable besides the Precision 370. I am fearful of loading my test system's IDE hard drive into my Precision to try and get Windows to install on it due to obvious reasons (because I'd be without Internet then and that's not good given what I do for a living).
If anyone has had any experience with anyone as idiotic as me in the past and can shed some light on what has happened or even better has a solution (no matter how difficult) that they think will work that I have not yet tried, please let me know.
Thanks much and feel free to ask me anything I have not posted here that would be helpful for you.
Regards, Jack
My first post here because I'm not sure where else to go. I am an 8-year MCSE with a network security background.
I have a Dell Precision Workstation 370:
- P4 3.2 HT
- 2GB RAM
- 1 x 80GB WD (OEM)
- 1 x 250GB Seagate (aftermarket, non-RAID obviously)
- 256MB nVidia 6800GS PCI-Ex (aftermarket)
- Windows XP Pro SP2
I was sold an older P-2 400mHz IBM Thinkpad from an ex-employer that was selling them to us for dirt cheap in order to get rid of the old and make way for the new. I finally got around to fiddling with the thing and I realized that its BIOS was locked with a password at the systems level, and I was unsuccessful in trying to get it unlocked to that level (although I got it unlocked to the user level, which is useless).
I had an IDE cable that allowed for a laptop HD to be placed into a desktop IDE port, with a power connector. I plugged this into the laptop's hard drive to try and format it from my Precision 370 since the laptop had no floppy drive and I was unsuccessful in getting it to boot from an external source (i.e. external floppy, USB key, etc.). After connecting the laptop hard drive to my 370, I booted the system. The system went through the POST phase just fine, but then a quick flash of "NTDETECT failed" came on the screen and the system rebooted. This has been the case now since Friday afternoon when I first started this idiotic procedure (quite possibly the dumbest thing I've tried to date).
I have the feeling that this IBM Thinkpad-BIOS-Locked hard drive has locked down my system's devices and quite possibly the motherboard, although I have evidence that proves quite to the contrary, which is strange.
First off, I removed the damnable laptop hard drive and re-installed my CD-RW and DVD-ROM drives. Then I rebooted, and still the "NTDETECT failed" message flickered across the screen and the system rebooted immediately.
I tried to boot into Safe Mode, and the Safe Mode screen comes up when I punch F8 after POST, but any selection made here to move forward results in the "NTDETECT Failed" message. I tried to run Windows Recovery and was told by Windows Setup that it could not detect any hard drives on my system, with "press F3 to exit" being my only option. I tried using a brand new 250GB Seagate (out of the box brand new) hard drive and that was also not detected. I tried a Windows XP boot disk, and the system simply will not boot from the disk. I tried the boot disk in another machine and it worked fine. I ran several Dell Diagnostics Tests, all with passing results. As far as I have ever known, Windows XP supports setup to SATA drives without the need of loading device drivers. When I try to load SATA device drivers at Windows XP Setup by pressing F6, Windows Setup just keeps asking me to insert the manufacturer's driver disk into the floppy drive, regardless of whether or not the disk is loaded into the floppy drive. I tested that disk and it worked fine another system. I took the floppy out and replaced it with a brand new one, out of the box. No good, same results. I put the floppy form my 370 into my test system, and it worked like a charm. So it isn't a bad floppy. I'm now thinking that something security-related has gotten embedded into my motherboard somehow.
I am on the latest available BIOS version for my 370, which is A07. I cleared out the BIOS by shorting the pins, and it cleared successfully. I even removed the battery, which I don't even think is necessary anymore, but I did it anyway. No good, still same results across the board. Funny thing is, I am able to boot from CD-ROM using both my Dell-supplied WinXP Pro SP1 OS disk and from my personal WinXP Pro disk (non-OEM, store-bought). Just that every time I do boot form CD-ROM, I am not able to go any further due to the OS not recognizing any SATA drives.
Things I have NOT tried yet:
- Booting from CD-ROM with an IDE hard drive as opposed to SATA
- Plugging my 80GB and 250GB hard drives into a SATA-capable system and attempting to access the data on them that way (and then promptly moving it to an external source before anything ELSE happens)
At this point I am at a loss, with the exceptions of what I have not tried as of yet. Unfortunately I haven't the resources to try either of those things, for I have no other system that is SATA-capable besides the Precision 370. I am fearful of loading my test system's IDE hard drive into my Precision to try and get Windows to install on it due to obvious reasons (because I'd be without Internet then and that's not good given what I do for a living).
If anyone has had any experience with anyone as idiotic as me in the past and can shed some light on what has happened or even better has a solution (no matter how difficult) that they think will work that I have not yet tried, please let me know.
Thanks much and feel free to ask me anything I have not posted here that would be helpful for you.
Regards, Jack