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Thanks to everyone for their sage advice.  Although my question was somewhat tongue-in-cheek, I appreciate the wisdom of the crowd -- and I love the term "percussive maintenance"!
 
I do have a bootable Windows utilities CD which I'll use to try to scrounge anything useful off the disk.
 
I wonder how many geeks carry around bootable thumb drives all the time?  I can just see someone on an airplane undergoing a hard drive problem.  The flight attendant asks gravely "Is there a nerd in the house?" -- and a NAG member rushes to the rescue.
 
/rich
 
PS - Barry, my wife heads the branch library in BPS.  Stop by and say hey sometime.  She may be looking for a new computer soon.

On Wed, Jan 14, 2009 at 9:33 AM, tigner <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Hi Richard,

I can loan you an external USB IDE adapter and power supply.
You have to remove the old disk, and connect it to the USB/IDE
adapter , which will then allow you to connect to another machine
via USB to attempt to recover what can be recovered.

I'm in BPS room 1230, phone 884 5538.



On Tue, 2009-01-13 at 22:20 -0500, Richard Wiggins wrote:
My wife's home computer, a very kewl as of 2001 Gateway desktop-and-monitor PC, died today.  The hard drive is able to begin to boot Windows XP -- you see the logo -- so that implies that some data is loading from the disk.  However you hear lots of seeking noises, and ultimately no finding. 
 
We probably don't have much data to salvage on it.  I find that in a cloud computing world, I've Gmailed just about anything of importance to her or to whaterver person I'm working with. 
 
Still, I would like to take one last look at the hard drive. So my question is, and I'm not kidding -- how hard do I hit it?  Do I pick up the unit and drop it?  Do I take a rubber mallet to it?  Do I gently tap it as it tries to boot?
 
Reminds me of a wisecrack circa 1979 -- on a clear disk, you can seek forever.
 
Thanks,
 
/rich
Barry A. Tigner
Electronics Shop manager
Physics and Astronomy department
Michigan State University
[log in to unmask]
517-884-5538