chinny22 wrote on 2024-09-11, 05:21:
I'd try out the existing IDE drives first, no point having them sit on a shelf and they are more durable then you think!
+1
There are indeed quite a few IDE drives that have proven themselves to be reliable over the years.
My personal favorite are the old(er?) Seagate Barracuda series, like 7200.7, "ATA IV", and "ATA V". Very few failures from these. Don't fret if you see a couple of bad sectors on a drive. As long as it's under a 50-100 or so bad sectors and not increasing with read/write operations, they should last longer than you care to use these drives. My oldest is an ATA IV from 20 years ago. Still holds all of the data I put on it from then and has incremented only 1 addition bad sector over all of these years.
As for other drives...
Maxtor, despite the name it made for itself as being unreliable, also had a few models that were pretty decent (and also a few that were total flops, like the slim ones they made, along with late Diamondmax series.)
IBM/Hitachi is also hit or miss depending on the series.
75GXP line got a pretty bad rep for failing, but IME they are not that bad at all if you provide them with good cooling / active airflow. The two problems they suffered most often were the magnetic media degrading and literally flaking off the glass platters, destroying more of the platters if this progressed unchecked. This is due to different expansion rates of the glass platters and the magnetic coating on the top... hence the reason to keep these drives cool. The other issue is corrupted buffer (cache) that happens at elevated temperatures (41-42C and onwards from my experience.) Being a cache chip problem, I've also seen this affect a few later Maxtor DiamondMax series too.
chinny22 wrote on 2024-09-11, 05:21:
Run scandisk over the drive a few times is a cheap and easy way to do a burn in test.
No need. Running it once is enough. Running it more than that will just make the drive run hot for no reason. On that note, it's always a good idea to put a fan on an HDD that is being thoroughly scanned or zero-filled. Prolonged heating and cooling cycles can degrade the disk surface over time.
ElectroSoldier wrote on 2024-09-11, 06:46:
Its a Dell GX270 and the Windows 98SE CD is a bog standard CD from a Select account.
IIRC, the GX270 SATA controller is SATA I mode. Being that these were still compatible machines with Windows 98, perhaps Dell actually did a properly compatible implementation of a SATA IDE emulation in BIOS... hence why everything worked from the get-go. With more modern motherboards with SATA, this isn't usually the case.