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
November 1st, 2011, 11:22
Does anyone know if heads from a ST2000DL003 would be good on a patient which is a ST2000DL001 ?
Both have same head map.
Thanks.
November 1st, 2011, 11:25
as far as i know only Model is enough for seagate heads rep.
November 1st, 2011, 11:28
Model here is different, patient models ends with 1, donor with 3.
November 1st, 2011, 12:04
i know my friend
i cut it short for u from the end
November 1st, 2011, 12:06

I'm going to try it. Head maps are same, same site code, first 3 digits of S/N match. Either it works....or it doesn't.
November 1st, 2011, 12:20
before doing so man remember for seagate again heads u will need same MODEL
if not do not waste ur donor for nothing
my advice
November 1st, 2011, 12:42
I do not believe that compatibility is restricted to match of model number.
Some different families will use different preamps and may not work. Different heads map will cause problem, especially if donor has less heads. Some similar models will have different shape chassis and will not be good donor.
I think only way to know for sure is to try it. I think nobody has 100% all the correct information, most is based on opinions and experience of others.
I try many cases before where based on others opinions it should not work but I reach success.
@Nick_CT good luck with this, let me know how it goes
November 1st, 2011, 18:23
einstein9 wrote:as far as i know only Model is enough for seagate heads rep.
Not true unfortunately
November 1st, 2011, 19:00
Heads are compatibility, it is fine.
November 1st, 2011, 22:41
AIUI, the first three characters of the serial number reflect the manufacturing location, platter type, and number and type of heads, in that order.
I would think that if those three characters were different, then the two drives would not be matched.
November 2nd, 2011, 4:45
Thanks for all the input and PMs. Managed to work around the problem without the need to head swap in the end, which is first price. However, at least we know for future.
November 2nd, 2011, 10:47
fzabkar wrote:AIUI, the first three characters of the serial number reflect the manufacturing location, platter type, and number and type of heads, in that order.
I would think that if those three characters were different, then the two drives would not be matched.
I knew it was important to match 3 digits of serial , never knew why. Ty Frank.
November 2nd, 2011, 15:38
Alexii wrote:I knew it was important to match 3 digits of serial ...
That's what I have independently determined from an analysis of serial numbers and specifications in product manuals.
Here is a collection of serial numbers for various models:
http://www.users.on.net/~fzabkar/HDD/seagate_sernum.txtThere are several references on the Internet that confirm my conclusion regarding heads. However the meaning of the second character is my best guess, but it does seem to fit the data.
I believe the first character has the following meaning.
Serial Number - Site Code:
--------------------------
3 - AMK - Singapore
3 - TK - Thailand
4 - TK - Thailand
5 - WUXISG WU - China
6 - SU - China
7 - ML2 -
9 - KRATSG TK - Thailand
November 2nd, 2011, 17:14
KRAT = Korat Plant
TK = Teparuk Plant
AMK = Ang Mo Kio
November 2nd, 2011, 18:31
guru wrote:KRAT = Korat Plant
TK = Teparuk Plant
AMK = Ang Mo Kio
WUXISG = Wuxi SeaGate ???
ML2 = Malaysia ???
November 2nd, 2011, 19:57
WUXISG = Wuxi-Singapore Industrial Park AKA "The Wuxi plant" in China . Does desktop / laptop HDD
November 2nd, 2011, 20:01
Lets even add a picture :O)
- Attachments
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- seagate-wuxi.jpg (80.62 KiB) Viewed 9749 times
November 3rd, 2011, 5:57
I've got a tough one.
SUZHSG.
November 3rd, 2011, 5:59
Suzhou plant in China maybe?
November 3rd, 2011, 9:23
SUZHSG= China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park
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