August 6th, 2019, 16:54
Boot 0x80M
DensityList:0x0000
PrgF
LED:0x000000BD FAddr:0x000059D8
LED:0x000000BD FAddr:0x000059D8
LED:0x000000BD FAddr:0x000059D8
(1Ah)-Serial Port Not Ready
Boot 0x80M
DensityList:0x0000
(P) SATA Reset
RAW OFF
PASS
Send Status: COMRESET seen
CSpd= 6Gbps
Set Transfer Mode selected
PIO selected
Set Transfer Mode selected
Ultra DMA selected
Servo Processor Is Reset.
Srv DETCR init 0x0000
Spin issued
!
RECOV Servo Op=0195 Resp=0005
Waiting drive spin up
PrgF
(H) SATA Reset
SSPSaveSettings
SSPRestoreSettings
Send Status: COMRESET seen
CSpd= 6Gbps
Set Transfer Mode selected
PIO selected
Set Transfer Mode selected
Ultra DMA selected
Waiting drive spin up
August 6th, 2019, 17:27
August 6th, 2019, 17:34
August 6th, 2019, 17:49
johnnyBrandom wrote:The last thing I can attempt on my own is to move the ROM from the failed drive to the donor PCB and see if the failed platters will then spin up and mount (joy). My question to you all is, what are the chances of this working?
johnnyBrandom wrote: I'm not sure how the diagnostic port lock works - if it comes from the ROM, I suppose there may be a chance the old ROM did not have the lock set
johnnyBrandom wrote:So in that scenario, is it worth swapping the ROMS? I have access to a rework station but not sure it's worth the hassle if probability of success is low.
August 6th, 2019, 18:20
August 6th, 2019, 18:31
edit: BTW - I should have mentioned in the original post that the platters from the failed drive don't spin
when paired with the failed PCB but they do spin when paired with the donor PCB
so that was a little encouraging. Just not enough to successfully complete the spin up sequence for the donor controller to be happy (the platters just continue to spin without achieving final spin up).
August 6th, 2019, 19:12
August 6th, 2019, 19:14
August 6th, 2019, 23:24
August 7th, 2019, 3:47
August 7th, 2019, 3:58
August 7th, 2019, 10:32
johnnyBrandom wrote:This is very helpful. On another forum, someone reported that these SSHD's are Rosewood drives and that not even PC3000 has diagnostic port unlock for this particular model of Rosewood (others, however, they do have). Can anyone confirm that for me?
Thanks.
August 7th, 2019, 15:32
$600 is already very cheap
August 7th, 2019, 15:54
pepe wrote:$600 is already very cheap
+1
pepe
ps: OP wrote 600+, which can be any figure between 600 and infinity
August 7th, 2019, 16:36
Doomer wrote:Right now there is no solution for this problem in PC3000, however if you are to submit your drive for recovery to Seagate they should have a solution, because they don't use PC3000 or other commercial tools for recovery.
August 7th, 2019, 16:42
fzabkar wrote:Doomer wrote:Right now there is no solution for this problem in PC3000, however if you are to submit your drive for recovery to Seagate they should have a solution, because they don't use PC3000 or other commercial tools for recovery.
Are you referring to the OP's case or all cases? IIUC, Seagate offer physical recoveries for all brands, not just their own. If that's true, then how would they recover a WD drive, say?
Is it true that Seagate's acquired a private data recovery service, and if so, would they not have been exposed to third party tools as a result?
August 7th, 2019, 17:43
fzabkar wrote:Doomer wrote:Right now there is no solution for this problem in PC3000, however if you are to submit your drive for recovery to Seagate they should have a solution, because they don't use PC3000 or other commercial tools for recovery.
Are you referring to the OP's case or all cases? IIUC, Seagate offer physical recoveries for all brands, not just their own. If that's true, then how would they recover a WD drive, say?
fzabkar wrote:Is it true that Seagate's acquired a private data recovery service, and if so, would they not have been exposed to third party tools as a result?
August 7th, 2019, 18:09
Doomer wrote:Seagate Recovery Services have in-house tools for all HDD manufacturers
August 7th, 2019, 18:23
fzabkar wrote:Doomer wrote:Seagate Recovery Services have in-house tools for all HDD manufacturers
This would imply that Seagate has either reverse engineered their competitors' products, or acquired the reverse engineered work of others, or obtained the information (eg VSCs) in some other way. I wonder if the HDD manufacturers share their VSCs (eg to avoid accidentally using the same codes)?
August 7th, 2019, 18:30
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