9 Legend

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47K Posts

July 5th, 2005 19:00

There is no such thing. Nothing in the ATAPI spec allows that kind of communication between the drive and the motherboard.

64 Posts

July 5th, 2005 21:00

Actually there is a program that will.  It uses the SMART technology to obtain the hard drive's temperature.  I had it installed while I was running XP Pro but deleted it when I upgraded to XP x64.

As I remember it, it was called something like EZ Fan, or something Fan.  Sorry but that's about the best I can do at this point.  It is shareware and available on the net.

15 Posts

July 6th, 2005 00:00

Harddrive FatBoy...you da man!!!:robotvery-happy:

64 Posts

July 6th, 2005 00:00

Found it.  It's called Speed Fan, originally designed to control the speed of the cooling fans but also reports hard drive temps.  That is if your drives have SMART technology.  Most later model hard drives do.

http://www.almico.com/speedfan.php

 

64 Posts

July 6th, 2005 01:00

... actually the HD stands for Harley Davidson, I ride a Harley Davidson Fatboy 2003 anniversary edition.

Glad I could help!

9 Legend

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47K Posts

July 8th, 2005 22:00


@hdFatBoy2003 wrote:

Found it.  It's called Speed Fan, originally designed to control the speed of the cooling fans but also reports hard drive temps.  That is if your drives have SMART technology.  Most later model hard drives do.

http://www.almico.com/speedfan.php


An interesting program.

However I did not find it reading the TEMP the values on this field are all zeros from my drives on my GX110.  The Bios in Most of the Optiplexes Supports SMART.  Aka the GXa,GX1,GX100,GX110,GX150,GX200,GX240,GX260,GX270,GX280.

Temperature monitoring may be something that was "added" or "optional" as part of the standard.

Reliability Predictors  Note that (TEMPERATURE) isnt in here.
 

Excessive bad sectors 
 Grown defect list, media defects, handling damage
 Number of defects, growth rate
 
 
Excessive run-out 
 Noisy bearings, motor, handling damage
 Run-out, bias force diagnostics
 
 
Excessive soft errors
 Crack/broken head, contamination
 High retries, ECC involves
 
 Motor failure, bearings
 Drive not ready, no platter spin, handling damage
 Spin-up retries, spin-up time
 
Drive not responding, no connect
 Bad electronics module
 None, typically catastrophic
 
 Bad servo positioning
 High servo errors, handling damage
 Seek errors, calibration retries
 
 
Head failure, resonance
 
 High soft errors, servo retries, handling damage
 Read error rate, servo error rate
 

http://support.dell.com/support/edocs/systems/opgx110/

S.M.A.R.T. is an acronym for Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology.

S.M.A.R.T. is an industry standard for monitoring and reporting fault conditions in a peripheral storage device, whether from damage or normal wear-and-tear. S.M.A.R.T. is intended to decrease the chance of data loss by giving adequate warning to these conditions, but it is no replacement for good disaster-recovery planning.



How S.M.A.R.T. Work?

A   S.M.A.R.T. drive monitors the internal performance of the motors, media, heads, and electronics of the drive, while our software monitors the overall reliability status of the drive. The reliability status is determined through the analysis of the drive's internal performance level and the comparison of internal performance levels to predetermined threshold limits.

S.M.A.R.T.-capable drives can monitor several key performance factors to assess reliability and predict an impending device failure. However, S.M.A.R.T. cannot possibly detect all impending failures. S.M.A.R.T. should be treated as an advisory service, and not a substitute for regularly backing-up your files.

Keeping your data safe can only be ensured by making back-up copies on a regular basis. The S.M.A.R.T. features of any device should not be considered a substitute for planning-ahead.

More detailed about S.M.A.R.T. technology you can read at Quantum hard disk manufacture company website archive.
http://web.archive.org/web/20000612020703/http://www.quantum.com/src/whitepapers/wp_smart_toc.htm

 

64 Posts

July 9th, 2005 00:00

I had no problem, it read my WD Sata drive and my two Fuji SCSI drives.  It never could give me a read out on my fan speed but I found the temp indicators reassuring.  Besides the three drives I'm also running a nVidia FX 3400 w\258mb, two processors and 3 GB of RAM and wanted to make sure that the case was cooled enough not to cause damage to the hard drives.

Sorry it's not working for you.  Possibly it's not detecting your chipset properly, if I remember correctly it gets most of it's info from the SMBus. 

Not running it right now as I'm still sorting out some minor issues with x64 and audio.

9 Legend

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47K Posts

July 9th, 2005 01:00

It gets my chipset and SMBUS.

It reads from SMART just fine.

But on my system there is not any reading for temperature.

Still its a free program and so its worth playing with I guess.

LOL
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