Driver Detected A Controller Error On Device Harddisk Dr1
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The Driver Detected A Controller Error On Device Harddisk1 Dr1 Windows 7
Search Show Threads Show Posts Advanced Search Go to Page... Windows 7: The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk1\DR1 Page the driver detected a controller error on device harddisk1 dr1 server 2008 r2 1 of 4 1 23 > Last » 13 Jul 2011 #1 urusai11 Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit 3 posts The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk1\DR1 Hello to everyone, I Just want to
The Driver Detected A Controller Error On Device Harddisk1 Dr1. Usb
confirm something, I'm using Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit and not encountering any freezing nor BSOD, but everytime I check the EVENT VIEWER it annoys me to see the error message "The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk1\DR1" ... I check the disk manager and from what I see in there my primary harddisk is located in channel0/Disk 0 while Disk1 is from my removable USB flash drive. Does that mean the one mentioned the driver detected a controller error on device harddisk1 dr2 in the EVENT was just actually my flash drive? Why was it called a harddisk??? Please someone confirm this for me because I'm getting paranoid if my harddisk is already starting to fail. Thanks for any helpful reply... My System Specs OS Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit urusai11 View Public Profile Find More Posts by urusai11 . 14 Jul 2011 #2 zigzag3143 Win 8 Release candidate 8400 2,137 posts Quote: Originally Posted by urusai11 Hello to everyone, I Just want to confirm something, I'm using Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit and not encountering any freezing nor BSOD, but everytime I check the EVENT VIEWER it annoys me to see the error message "The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk1\DR1" ... I check the disk manager and from what I see in there my primary harddisk is located in channel0/Disk 0 while Disk1 is from my removable USB flash drive. Does that mean the one mentioned in the EVENT was just actually my flash drive? Why was it called a harddisk??? Please someone confirm this for me because I'm getting paranoid if my harddisk is already starting to fail. Thanks for any helpful reply... Yes it is the USB Called an HD as a throw back to when PC's had floppy drives. My System Specs System Man
(Microsoft) Technical Consultant/SI GROUP SPONSORED BY MICROSOFT See more RELATED PROJECTS Headquarters Move! We are moving to a new building where we'll have the top 2 floors and have to be ready to
The Driver Detected A Controller Error On Device Harddisk3 Dr3
scale to 350 users on a wired network. Home Lab Setup of Windows Server
The Driver Detected A Controller Error On Device Harddisk6 Dr6
2012 R2 home lab, using Hyper-V and Windows 8.1 clients. Inventory of Monitors There was a topic I ran into, that the driver detected a controller error on device harddisk3 dr4 needed a way to inventory monitors that were attached to their devices. I created a quick Powershell script that would call WMI for monitor info. TECHNOLOGY IN THIS DISCUSSION Microsoft 491163 Followers Follow Microsoft Windows Server http://www.sevenforums.com/bsod-help-support/175034-driver-detected-controller-error-device-harddisk1-dr1.html Microsoft Windows Server 2012 Join the Community! Creating your account only takes a few minutes. Join Now Am seeing the following in my 2008R2 Event Viewer: * Event Time: 19 Feb 2013 02:42:19 AM * Source: Disk * Event Log: System * Type: Error * Event ID: 11 * Event User: N/A * The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk2\DR2. On this server I have internal RAID volumes, an https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/304581-driver-detected-a-controller-error-which-hdd-is-device-harddisk2-dr2 external iSCSI drive (DroboPro), and several USB 2.0 hard drives attached. How can I determine what hard drive / storage device is "\Device\Harddisk2\DR2"? Thanks in advance for any feedback. Cheers, Derek Reply Subscribe RELATED TOPICS: Driver detected a controller error The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk1\DR1. system Error   1 2 Next ► 28 Replies Cayenne OP murpheous Feb 19, 2013 at 2:42 UTC click start, right click computer and select manage. Expand storage on the left and select disk management. That should tell you. 1 Sonora OP derektom Feb 19, 2013 at 2:56 UTC Thanks for your reply. That's the first place I looked but I'm unsure how to correlate Harddisk2\DR2 to any of those drives. Is "DR2" = "Disk 2"? Attached is a screenshot for reference. Thanks again. 0 Mace OP Rockn Feb 19, 2013 at 3:36 UTC Does diskpart give you more detailed info? 0 Mace OP LarryG. Feb 19, 2013 at 4:05 UTC Do you have any Management software installed for the RAID? That would have it's own logging and hopefully diagnostics too. 0 Jalapeno OP supasieu Feb 19, 2013 at 4:36 UTC Try this link: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/244780/en-us
0 Sonora OP derektom Feb 20, 2013ordeal with this Event 11 that Windows quietly generates. It took us few weeks to fully work out why Windows suddenly started hanging, misbehaving or even crashing with blue screen. Now that I feel it is http://www.adir1.com/2012/01/solved-the-driver-detected-a-controller-error-on-deviceideideport2/ fully resolved, I thought I’d share my conclusion (and the process) – hopefully it will help few others out there who are struggling with this. Ridiculously, many people are likely affected by this issue, but unless they open Event Viewer and search for this event id 11, they will not realize that hanging is not “normal” behavior, even for Windows! OS seems to silently recover from this problem 10 to 60 seconds later, which driver detected is really strange in my book – considering that user isn’t even alerted to this serious atapi error. For impatient souls among us, here are my conclusions: First thing – check the SATA/EIDE and power cable connection between your hard-drive and the motherboard. If possible, try another SATA outlet on motherboard or another SATA cable if available. If it still happens, the bad news is that this is likely a disk controller error, which is driver detected a especially problematic since nowadays disk controllers are built into the Motherboard. If you are in a budget crunch, one potential workaround is to slow down your HD to use different PIO. This may avoid hangs, but will slow overall performance, so no fun solution… Proper solution appears to be to replace motherboard, hence replacing disk controller. There are many motherboards starting at just $50 and in most cases it will improve overall performance and stability for you, even if you keep the same CPU and other components. I am pretty confident that this is the right diagnosis, as we went through a lot of trial and error investigative work, in a space of few weeks, after it started abruptly. At first, I was pretty much convinced that HD is dying. The system had two hard-drives, and the older hard-drive was seemingly working just fine, even with the same SATA cable and connected to the same slot on the Motherboard. Turns out it was using slower PIO by virtue of it being older HDD. During the troubleshooting process I reinstalled fresh Windows 7 64 Bit multiple times, on various HD drives, only to see the issue start happening almost instantly after clean install. Few days ago a fresh HDD became available (separate long story), so I tried replacing the “dying” HD. Guess what,