I have a W2k workstation that ran really, REALLY slowly. I've determined that the current HD is reading at a snails pace. The data on it seems to be completely intact, it will boot (W2k) and work, but very very slowly.
This being said, I decided a fresh install on a new disk was the way to go. A quick PXE boot, about 20 minutes stepping through the image install and I've got the machine back up, running great.
I've re-attached the old drive as slave to copy the user's files, mostly just the .pst files for Outlook.
The copy process is going extraordinarily slowly, a few hours now for 600 MB of data.
The system also has bogged down incredibly during the copy process, but processor utilization is practically zero. It will show periods of 'usual' speed at times.
Another clue: When using the MaxBlast II utility that came with the new replacement drive, I got an I/O timeout when copying the old disk to the new (hence my decision to do a fresh install).
I'm a bit stumped as to the cause of this. The drive is running cool, and doesn't make any funny noises. I've seen drives die, but never like this. Does anybody have an explanation or theory? I'm very curious. Thanks.
-Zeke
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