It sure looks like the P400 is reporting that it doesn't see any drive installed in bay 3 at all. I 'm assuming this was a brand new drive and you can see the HP sticker on the drive itself?
If you have another HP server with an empty drive bay, you might try installing the drive in there temporarily just to see if it's recognized. Otherwise, try removing and re-inserting that new drive. Pay attention as you plug it in to see if any LED's light up, whether you can see, hear or feel it spinning.
In fact, when you remove it to re-insert it, hold it to see if you can still feel the platters coming to a stop.
All of that might let you know whether the drive bay itself is the problem. I've had that happen several times unfortunately, and it's frustrating because you might think you have bad drives but it's the bay. It's not common, but it does happen.
Otherwise, if you try the drive again or in another system and it's still not recognized, you should return it for a replacement. The ADU shows it's not recognizing the drive at all... no model or serial # info, "bad sense", but you can see that the cached values for that bay show the info on the old drive that used to be there. So it seems like the bay is probably okay and it's just a bad drive or it was inserted funny.
By the way, you can see why the old drive failed... 4 hard write errors and 9 hard read errors, plus 15 "not ready failures".
If you have another HP server with an empty drive bay, you might try installing the drive in there temporarily just to see if it's recognized. Otherwise, try removing and re-inserting that new drive. Pay attention as you plug it in to see if any LED's light up, whether you can see, hear or feel it spinning.
In fact, when you remove it to re-insert it, hold it to see if you can still feel the platters coming to a stop.
All of that might let you know whether the drive bay itself is the problem. I've had that happen several times unfortunately, and it's frustrating because you might think you have bad drives but it's the bay. It's not common, but it does happen.
Otherwise, if you try the drive again or in another system and it's still not recognized, you should return it for a replacement. The ADU shows it's not recognizing the drive at all... no model or serial # info, "bad sense", but you can see that the cached values for that bay show the info on the old drive that used to be there. So it seems like the bay is probably okay and it's just a bad drive or it was inserted funny.
By the way, you can see why the old drive failed... 4 hard write errors and 9 hard read errors, plus 15 "not ready failures".