My Book is Not Being Seen by Windows

Ok so the most popular external drives on the market have to be the My Book and The Passport. I get a ton of calls every week about them, and I don’t believe it is because it is not a good product but more because they are being SO widely used. So lets start with the main problem I get called about which is that Windows is not seeing the drive at all when it is plugged in. The customer does not even receive the BONG noise that a USB drive has been hooked up. Now in most cases the device seems to still be getting power.

mybook front and back In the case of the MY BOOK I recommend that the customer open up the chassis that is holding the hard drive and pull the drive out of it. Now I am going to preface this with saying it is highly likely this will void your warranty with WD, but it can allow you to gain access to your data. Once you open the chassis you and have the hard drive out you can then either put it in another chassis or slave it directly into the machine. Either option will give you the answer you are looking for, which is , is the drive bad or was it just the chassis. In A LOT of cases it is just the chassis. When we buy one of these devices we are paying for the hard drive and not a lot of extra cash goes into the making of the chassis.

Now in the case of the Passport, these are laptop drives inside of little chassis so you will either need special cables to convert down the size of everything in your desktop machine or to buy a chassis that supports laptop drives. These chassis can be picked up for very reasonable pricing at Wal-Mart, Best Buy, CompUSA, Etc. Again opening the Passport will leave you not having a warranty on the device any longer. If your Western Digital external disk is making noises you my need hard drive recovery.

About Jacqui Best

I started my technology career way back in 1991, when I worked for a local computer store in Pinellas Square Mall. I was a PC technician as well as the trainer. Afterward I moved on to Consolidated Software Products where I was the phone technical support for Disk Analyst, which was for all practical purposes the first piece of data recovery software ever. I then moved on to The Learning Curve, where I was the office manager for many years, this company was at the forefront of data recovery and training software. I finally decided I wanted to move into some different fields and expand my technology back ground beyond data recovery. I got hired on with American CompuSystems where I was the Road Runner Pinellas County PC Installs manager, while in this department I obtained my MCP in NT 4.0. I later moved on to be an in field network administrator for this company. After ACS I then took a position with Knight Enterprises a sub contractor of Time Warner/ Bright House. I was the Regional PC Installs Manager. After 2 years at Knight I decided it was time to come back to my roots and took a job with DTIData as their Software Technical support person.

Comments

  1. ted says:

    How do you slave it directly into the machine. the Geek Squad said that it was most likley a bad resister…is that in the chassis or hard drive.

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