- #WESTERN DIGITAL SENTINEL STARTUP FAILED 0XD9 HOW TO#
- #WESTERN DIGITAL SENTINEL STARTUP FAILED 0XD9 SOFTWARE#
- #WESTERN DIGITAL SENTINEL STARTUP FAILED 0XD9 PC#
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#WESTERN DIGITAL SENTINEL STARTUP FAILED 0XD9 HOW TO#
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I hope this will help you to take images and record videos from your microscope! And please tell me if I have answered your question, Michael. I didn’t choose a high-end model, because the resolution of the microscope camera is low (compared to modern 4K) and I do not need a high framerate. I use a PCIe card model because I am not mobile and I wanted the HDMI passthrough feature (resend the video feed to my monitor). A USB dongle for example can be used on different computers or a laptop. Note that there are different form factors for acquisition devices and each has its pros/cons.
#WESTERN DIGITAL SENTINEL STARTUP FAILED 0XD9 PC#
I have a desktop PC and I use an Elgato capture card. Otherwise, you can watch the video on your computer. Some acquisition devices have an HDMI out port that you can connect to your monitor.
#WESTERN DIGITAL SENTINEL STARTUP FAILED 0XD9 SOFTWARE#
The software shipped with the acquisition device allows you to record the video feed and take still images from your computer. Then, you connect the output of the camera to the input of the acquisition device. Indeed, this camera model doesn’t record (other models can record as a camcorder). If you want to capture the video – and/or take still images – you need a video acquisition card – or dongle – for your computer. For simple visualization – like during inspection work – you use an HDMI cable and connect this port of the camera to your monitor. Good job, WD (this is ironic, just in case □). As suspected, there was nothing terrible, and the recovery only took a few hours – versus a week when I swap out a dead drive. Then a miracle happened, and the unit engaged in a repair cycle. Then, I rebooted forcefully the system (the only thing you can do after 0xD9 error anyway). While the NAS was powered on, I removed and re-seated every HDD. In the end, I was ready to toss the unit into the garbage can where it belonged when I tried a final trick. I relived the same horror movie: no more support (that’s the only wise move from WD), no clear explanation or procedure to follow on the forums, miserably failing recovery procedure, etc., etc. After swapping out the UPS, of course, the last Sentinel DX4000 I own refused to boot and stubbornly showed a useless Startup Failed: 0xD9 message. Well, guess what? For some unknown reasons, the UPS protecting two NAS-es and my workstation crashed (I am adding this to the list of what will fail on you). The system is garbage, and the customer support is deplorable. I had it all! In particular, I recall the awful experience with Western Digital, and their infamous Sentinel DX4000. Not only HDDs fail – we have RAID to protect ourselves from such failures –, but PSU-es, motherboards, and even NICs can and will fail us. Over the years, I learn the hard way never to trust these devices. I am using several NAS-es to store and mirror our digital data at home.
The other improvement of the week was in extremist salvation.