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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
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Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 0:50

I have a very old 2.5" Toshiba 30gb. Model MK3021GAS.

I have put the platter into a working donor drive but the head still just cycles to the center of the platter and to the edge, over and over and after a minute it just parks and does nothing. Is this platter garbage?

Thanks.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 2:04

You run hard disk without top cover?

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 9:52

No but I can hear it.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 10:44

Drive would not spin correctly due to bad bearing.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 12:01

I did not use a flow hood but I have a clean area to work in (I put the original platterms from the donor drive back in and it worked fine).

I did not swap pcbs. I didn't know this mattered, I will try this today.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 12:47

s8200 wrote:I have a very old 2.5" Toshiba 30gb. Model MK3021GAS.

I have put the platter into a working donor drive but the head still just cycles to the center of the platter and to the edge, over and over and after a minute it just parks and does nothing. Is this platter garbage?

Thanks.



Hi,
How Many Platters is This Brother ? . Sometimes You Could Heat The Motor Bearing And Copy your Data But Sometimes Not

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 21:43

Yes it's 1 platter.

Which pcb? The little one hooked to the head assy or the main one thats on the underside of the drive?

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 18th, 2016, 22:22

s8200 wrote:Yes it's 1 platter.

Which pcb? The little one hooked to the head assy or the main one thats on the underside of the drive?

The main one. Don't touch the head/preamp assembly.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 19th, 2016, 20:38

Swapped over the main board, still no luck. Hope lost?

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 19th, 2016, 21:39

I wouldn't say all hope is lost, but severely diminished. It's sad because this may have been an affordable recovery had you gone to a pro at the beginning. Now I doubt anyone will want to touch it for less than a couple grand.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 20th, 2016, 16:13

if donor heads are incompatible u need to swap mha as well.

pepe

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 27th, 2016, 21:56

2 different "pros" wanted $1400 and $1500, so I figured I'd try.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 29th, 2016, 2:21

And this is why you leave it the pros... There is a reason why it costs so much. Hell, we try and avoid doing any form of platter swap if possible. If that drive had more than 1 platter in it then you are likely hosed to begin with. Drives with multiple platters have alignment of the platters themselves. Moving them just a hair out of alignment (literally) will mean data is unrecoverable.

When you swapped platter over to the new drive, did you check and make sure the drive itself had matching model number, hard drive code and country of manufacture? How did you remove the heads from the platter? Just pull them straight across?

Was the spindle actually stuck on the old drive or was there head stiction?

Sorry sound like I am grilling you but I think more information is needed. Just asking questions.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 29th, 2016, 8:57

MK3021GAS has heads on ramp normally and these drives suffered from the bearing drying out.
Apart from that i agree, it should be done by a pro to avoid stupid mistakes.

Re: Platter swap on old Toshiba

September 29th, 2016, 10:27

Omega wrote:And this is why you leave it the pros... There is a reason why it costs so much. Hell, we try and avoid doing any form of platter swap if possible. If that drive had more than 1 platter in it then you are likely hosed to begin with. Drives with multiple platters have alignment of the platters themselves. Moving them just a hair out of alignment (literally) will mean data is unrecoverable.

When you swapped platter over to the new drive, did you check and make sure the drive itself had matching model number, hard drive code and country of manufacture? How did you remove the heads from the platter? Just pull them straight across?

Was the spindle actually stuck on the old drive or was there head stiction?

Sorry sound like I am grilling you but I think more information is needed. Just asking questions.

Boy did I come across arrogant and pompous little know-it-all there (still green under the collar here myself). Was really late at night and should have waited before posting. Just re-read everything and things are much more clear. Missed the 1 platter part. Sorry about that. Please disregard my post.
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