problem with external SCSI hard drive, and OS9 startup
When I start up in OS X with the SCSI drive turned on (before the recent problems), the icons for the SCSI hard drive appear, but trying to open anything on the SCSI drive leads directly to a freezeup.
In the past, starting up in OS 9 made the SCSI drive completely accessible and useful. I have important files stored on this drive. Until recently, I was able to startup from the OS 9 system on one of the partitions on the SCSI drive.
Recently, I have been unable to start up in OS 9. One apparent reason is that the external is partitioned into 3 volumes, and one of the 3 volumes is apparently corrupted in some way. I would be happy to erase the corrupted partition, however, I see no good way to do it. Unfortunately, while I have an apple OS9 cd, the computer will not start from it now, whether the SCSI drive is turned on or not. When trying to start up with the OS9 cd, it cycles for a while, then it restarts with the chime. It makes little sense to me how the computer could work in OS X but not OS 9, when the computer is so old there was no OS X when I bought it.
When I start up in OS X with the SCSI drive turned on, I see icons on the desktop for the two uncorrupted partitions. I have an OS 9 program, Hard Disk Toolkit, that I theoretically could use to mount or erase the bad partition, however, it does not run in Classic, and requires an actual boot in OS 9.
So, maybe somebody could answer one or more of these questions:
1. Is there a way to erase or repair the partition on the SCSI drive from OS X?
2. Is there a way to determine why the G3 will no longer start up from the apple OS 9 cd, so I can get it to start up, and then use Hard Disk Toolkit?
Thanks for whatever help you can give.
Jim Lawrence
G3/266 desktop Mac OS 9.2.x