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Hi everyone,
I recently attempted a head swap on a Seagate Barracuda Green ST2000DL003. The drive had been in an external casing, and was dropped. On power up, it beeped three times - sounded like a head problem, since it would spin up, THEN beep. So I opened the casing to look after getting a donor of the same type. Upon opening the casing, the heads were all severed but had left no damage on the platters. Having performed numerous successful swaps in the past on older drives, I found a donor drive at Harddrivesforsale.com, who supplied me with an exact match (9VT166-515, firmware CC45). The donor drive worked when I got it, was recognized in windows, and registered as 1.81 TB as it should.
I swapped the heads in a clean environment, closed it up and used the original (patient) PCB board. The drive now spins up, does not beep or click, but I hear it read for one second and stop. It continues to spin, and seagate's seatools will not recognize anything at all. When this didn't work, I tried the other PCB board (from the donor) and it did the exact same thing; spins up, reads, and continues to spin.
I have read a bunch about swapping EEPROM chips from patient PCB board to the donor and using the donor, but I am having trouble finding an answer about what the EEPROM mismatch would look like symptom-wise, and if using a PCB with incorrect EEPROM would cause more damage. Some have said that a PCB issue is indicated by the drive failing to spin up at all, but I feel like this may not be the case with EEPROM incompatibility, since that has to do with mapping the platters (or so I think). If anyone can shed any light on this, I would really appreciate it! I dropped this drive as I was copying its contents to a new backup drive, which is just all kinds of ironic.
Any advice anybody would have would be great - as I hadn't done a head swap in 7 or 8 years, things have changed, despite looking similar hardware-wise! I'm beginning to see that it's not a simple hardware exchange anymore! Thanks in advance!
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