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This is really wierd. Ok, I've got this Western Digital Caviar hard drive. When i boot with it slaved to my 15gb drive, my machine gets to "detecting IDE devices" and then this drive starts to beep or squeel at me. I don't really think the drive is fu***d, but why would the thing be beepin at me? This started happening right after it was imaged over to a new drive. Jumpers are correct. two different people have checked that. lol. Could it be firmware? Is there any way to flash the drive's eprom? Any help greatly appreciated!!

Sure sounds like a bad drive to me. I've never heard of a drive beeping but a squeel sure is bad news.

Beep codes are normal. The sequence of codes will tell you what is wrong. It's probably not the hard drive beeping, but your system speaker. You will need to contact your motherboard manufacturer or look in your manual to see what the # of beeps means. It probably is hd related from what you said tho. Here are some standard beep codes..
none
You're supposed to hear at least one beep. If you truly don't hear anything, either your computer's power supply, motherboard, or PC speaker is no good.1 short
System RAM Refresh failure. Your programmable interrupt timer on your motherboard has failed. It could also be your interrupt controller, but either way, your motherboard will need to be replaced to fix it.2 short
Your computer has memory problems. First, check video. If video is working, you'll see an error message. If not, you have a parity error in your first 64K of memory. Check your SIMMs. Reseat them and reboot. If this doesn't do it, the memory chips may be bad. You can try switching the first and second bank memory chips. First banks are the memory banks in which your CPU finds its first 64K of base memory. You'll need to consult your manual to see which bank is first. If all of your memory tests good, you probably need to buy another motherboard.3 short
Same as 2 beeps; follow diagnosis above.4 short
Your problem could be a bad timer. The system timer failed to work properly. It will require motherboard replacement.5 short
CPU Failure. Replace the CPU or possibly the motherboard.6 short
The chip on your motherboard that controls your keyboard isn't working. First, try another keyboard. If that doesn't help, reseat the chip that controls the keyboard, if it isn't soldered in. If it still beeps, replace the chip if possible. The chip is erroring in the gate A20 switch that allows the system to run in virtual mode. Replace the motherboard if the chip is soldered in.7 short
Your CPU has generated an exception error. This could be a fault of the CPU or a combination of problems with the motherboard. Try replacing the motherboard.8 short
Your video card isn't working. Make sure it is seated well in the bus. If it still beeps, either the whole card is bad or the memory on it is. Your best bet is to install another video card.9 short
ROM checksum error. This means that the checksum error checking value does not match the content of the BIOS ROM. This means the BIOS ROM is probably bad, and needs to be replaced.10 short
Your problem lies deep inside the CMOS. All chips associated with the CMOS will likely have to be replaced. Your best bet is to get a new motherboard.11 short
Your L2 cache memory is bad and your computer disabled it for you. You could reactivate it by pressing -Ctrl- -Alt- -Shift- -+- , but you probably shouldn't. Instead, replace your L2 cache memory. Obviously, this could lead to outright motherboard replacement.1 long, 3 short
Memory test failure. An error has been detected in the memory over the first 64K. Try replacing the memory, and if that doesn't do it, the motherboard.1 long, 8 short
Display test failure. Your video card is either missing or defective. Replace it. If its part of your motherboard, you'll need to replace it or bypass it.

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rundll32.exe
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