Ryobi does a great job of making replacement chargers, batteries, etc. relatively inexpensive and also readily available. For inexpensive tools, they're among the best, so I would just replace the charger.
Pete
Just got mine today. Shows as 698.64GB in XP Disk Management. It's quiet, but it runs very hot -- I'm transferring data with the new drive in an external USB case with the cover removed and the drive is hot to the touch. Once it's in my case, it will have active cooling, so hopefully that...
I have an external (USB) hard drive that I was using for backups on my home server (running Windows Home Server). I had to reinstall the server OS and now am receiving a "the file cannot be accessed by the system" error when trying to copy files from the external hard drive back to the server...
Absolutely. I remember a time when Microcenter had a 540MB (that's MEGABYTES, kids) hard drive on sale for $279. I jumped on that thing faster than an epileptic on a trampoline.
Pete
Picked mine up today after ordering online on Thursday. It's the 16MB cache non-windowed version. I'll probably Ghost my old 74GB drive to this tomorrow. Trying to figure out WTF is up with the super-lame SATA cable they pack with the drive, it's headed straight for the trash bin.
Pete
I spent 9 years of my life as a submariner, much of that time at sea, with a number of extended deployments. On my last deployment (6 months, Gulf War I), 13 guys were served divorce papers on the pier when we returned, including a sailor that worked for me. It was rough.
One of my shore...
I just did this.
1) Enable the JMicron controller in the BIOS and install JMicron drivers. Shut down.
2) Connect boot drive to JMicron controller, go into BIOS, change Intel SATA to AHCI. Make sure the JMicron controller is the boot device. I disconnected all other SATA drives at this...
I'm looking for guidance here in an effort to not wipe my home file server's drives by mistake. The server is running Windows 2003 Server Standard Edition.
Currently, my boot drives (2x 80GB WD SATA drives) are set up as the boot drives in a RAID1 configuration using NVRAID (motherboard is an...
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