Ok, see what you do not understand about the info on the link below.
http://www.seagate.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?/at/st1144a.txt
Then, try it on a 486 or basic old pentium board. Drive was last normally sold in the days of the 486 SX and the last of the 386's (the spec sheet I had was dated in 1991)
Most of the drives that old did not have manual parameters printed on them,so look near the bottom of the linked page for a couple possibilities adn soem explanations of Write-PreComp and at the top for the jumper block meanings. This drive can marginally be run on a Pentium 133, 100,or 75 system, but getting data on that MODERN a system might be fun as you would have to access it as a not PIO4 (prob PIO2 or PIO0), not 32 Bit, and Not LBA. This 130 MB HD is pre-ALL-those-things.
Alos, if using a floppy to boot, make dang sure the floppy is write-protected-- the time frame when this drive was sold was just prior to the Stealth viruses becoming widespread. As I think was said above, DOS boot floppy is best way to go.
An old Norton Rescue floppy set is next best, just do not let it try to restore the CMOS on the mobo as you will have no way of knowing if that is the right CMOS file on the rescue floppy set. But, Norton Disk Doctor on such a floppy set might prove handy.
Best of Luck with it. (Yes, I was fixing boxes that used that HD, and built 486's and early Pentiums that got data transfered from that and "same-gen relatives" of that Seagate HD family. Still build boxes.)