Data recovery and disk repair questions and discussions related to old-fashioned SATA, SAS, SCSI, IDE, MFM hard drives - any type of storage device that has moving parts
January 8th, 2009, 23:00
The adaptives for this drive are stored in the processor, and unlike some other WD drives, you are not likely to get a PCB swap to work.
It's a job for a pro, but it's a fairly easy one, usually.
Jono
January 8th, 2009, 23:24
because you opened it the price would be higher
January 9th, 2009, 12:29
The simple act of opening these WD drives actually complicates things because the cover screw which fits through the head assembly is critical to the proper positioning of the heads relative to the platters. Readusting this screw to the proper position can often be a time-consuming issue. Hence, the potential for additional cost. Apart from that, as stated in a previous post, the adaptive data which is specific to each drive is stored in the processor chip. This information must be transferred to the new PCB using specialized equipment. Long story short, if data is important it's a job for a pro.
January 9th, 2009, 23:32
Thanks for the feedback / confirmation. BTW, I took out my hobby magnifier and took a closer look at the chip with the burned leg. It would be nice to think it could be as simple as re-soldering, but the pad (or whatever you call it) on the board is gone, so that leg is just dangling ... and it's a multi-layer board, so who knows what it is supposed to be connected to.
So how do I go about finding a pro to do what needs to be done to get my data back?
January 10th, 2009, 0:05
jono-ats wrote:The adaptives for this drive are stored in the processor,
Out of curiosity, which chip is the processor? The one with the burned leg, or the one that looks like a ROM (two rows of legs)?
January 11th, 2009, 21:05
JChad wrote:jono-ats wrote:The adaptives for this drive are stored in the processor,
Out of curiosity, which chip is the processor? The one with the burned leg, or the one that looks like a ROM (two rows of legs)?
The chip with the big M (Marvell).
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