On Sun, 2007-01-21 at 12:33 -0500, Claude Jones wrote: > I'm convinced that laptop hd failures are in large measure caused by > heat - poor engineering design in cooling provisions combined with > drives that run too hot are my current no. 1 suspect. I think that's a general problem. Even in desktop cases, hard drives often run awfully hot. They're often not bolted on to something that can help dissipate heat, and often don't have good air flow around them. I rearranged things in an unreliable Windows machine so that a fan blew across a drive, and it went from being hot to mildly cool, and all the strange system errors disappeared at the same time. I'm guessing due to either the drive producing errors while hot, or simply not being instantly readable on demand. -- (Currently running FC4, in case that's important to the thread) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.