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Well, that's my test system. Or at least that was my test system. First off, the lowest beige drive is a 12x Toshiba CD-ROM. That is no longer present. Initially this is what I tested on, but I had a minor incident ... I fried my hard drive. It was my fault though. To make a long story short, I was hooking up the cables after the tests were completed but I couldn't see the FDD pins, so I just did it by touch. Turns out only three of the four pins connected. Or one of the four; I'm not sure. It also turns out that my HDD (a 30gb IBM 75GXP, I know some of you are happy to read this) was connected on the same line. So I fire up the system. Hear a few cracks. Turn it off just in time to see a handful of smoke and smell some burnt plastic.
Good news is, nothing in the power supply was damaged. Although a little brown, the FDD connector still functions perfectly and so does every other component in the system. Except the hard drive. That's the bad news. It was a good drive that lasted me for almost two years and although I had no valuable information on it (except the saved test data) it was still sad to see it go. Oh well, now I have another IBM drive in there, this one even louder and more annoying: a 60GXP.
Donc en gros le testeur a mal branché l'alim de son lecteur de D7 ... et ça a bousillé son DD IBM qui était sur la même nappe d'alim