Encouraged by all the positive feedback and offers for help, last night I dug what is left of my A2000 system out of the basement. I found that I still have the old 1084 monitor, the A2000 with GVP 030 @40Mhz SCSI controller and ram expansion. I also have a high density floppy drive (I thought it had got lost in the move too). Yea!
I took the machine apart and used compressed air to clean everything out including the power supply. Man it was dirty. I looked around for something that looked like a battery but could not find one. I did notice a large blue capacitor on the front of the motherboard just left of the keyboard port that seemed to be leaking slightly. An area on the motherboard for about half an inch around it seemed to have an oily substance on it. I cleaned it up. Is this large blue cylinder (that looks like a capacitor to me) the battery?
After cleaning up the machine I unplugged the HD and turned it on. I immediately got the kickstart screen! Yea! According to the screen I have the 2.0 roms. I then powered down and plugged in the HD (what the heck)! Nothing. I powered off and on again and hey... I got a CLI window starting the bootup then the HD locked up. I tried again... after about the 10th time or so, I managed to completely boot up! Wow! I had forgotten but the machine was configured to use a soft kick or something to load a 3.0 rom and it has OS 3.0 on it, not 3.1 which I had assumed.
So I start messing around and everything seems fine then after about 5 mins, the HD light comes on, stays on and app accessing the HD hangs (stop watch cursor). I can switch over to any other running app however no more disk access is possible. I then power off and back on several times in order to fully boot up again. I used "diskinfo" to check the drives (DH0: through DH3:) and notice that the status of DH1: is "Validating". The HD is not spinning though.
I ran HDToolBox (or whatever it is called) and none of the drives show up! So then I ran the GVP Utils. The drives show up. I selected the option to map out bad blocks... it goes for a few minutes and then the HD light stays on and the machine just hangs.
Try number three... I used a shareware tool (some disk recovery tool I found in my utilities drawer) that has an option to validate the drive. The first try got about 1/8th of the way through scanning the drive and then it locked up. A second try got almost 1/3rd of the way through the drive before locking up.
It was now 2 am so I gave up at this point.
I am of the opinion that there is something terribly wrong with that HD. I have two other small SCSI drives kicking around and if I can find a SCSI ribbon cable with more than one plug on it, I am going to attempt to copy the contents of the existing drive over to them.
Anyone have any thoughts or ideas?
Thanks!