August 16th, 2019, 11:04
August 16th, 2019, 12:00
senordingdong wrote:So as we know these drives are complete garbage. I had one come in that would get ready, copy data for a few seconds then fail. If i killed power for a few seconds it would read a sector or 2 and fail. Seemed to be getting pretty hot as well. I was feeling around the pcb and noticed that when i kept my finger on the hottest spot of the board it would sustain reading for as long as i could stand keeping it on there. I assume i was sinking heat through my finger. I now have a large PC fan at full speed over top of it pulling out the heat and it has been sustaining reading for several minutes.
Any explanation for this phenomenon? Part of PCB being the square shape just above the UART port.
Well hope it helps someone somewhere sometime
August 16th, 2019, 12:10
August 16th, 2019, 18:37
Is there any special fridge/freezer brand do you know with this mirracle power of bad sector repair.
August 16th, 2019, 21:26
johnnyBrandom wrote:Very happy you have been able to recover some/all of your data with minimal expense and thank you for reporting your experience as it may help others with similar circumstance which I believe is the intent of this forum.
BTW - I think there are "experts" here who may be interested in purchasing your magical fan which is clearly capable of repairing hard drives <sarcasm>because there is no way that thermal properties can play a role in HD data recovery - not possible</sarcasm> ...
Quote from @Dananjaya in thread https://forum.hddguru.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=38742Is there any special fridge/freezer brand do you know with this mirracle power of bad sector repair.
Your prayers have been answered @Dananjaya! Senordingdong (BTW - that is an awesome username) has found a magical fan that he may be willing to sell you!
August 16th, 2019, 23:13
Blizzard wrote:His argument was against putting a hard drive in a freezer, which you suggested to someone.
johnnyBrandom wrote:I recommend you research these options first to learn if any such scenarios match your circumstance and also what temperature ranges are likely to help.
August 17th, 2019, 0:18
Johnny says this was not a suggestion, just in case anyone else makes the mistake like I did of seeing it as a suggestion- please don't put your hard drive in a freezer.johnnyBrandom wrote:...I have read of some successes (but have no first hand knowledge) that describe placing drives in a fridge/freezer to lower the temperature which can slightly change the mechanical/EM behavior enough to get the drive to work temporarily...
August 17th, 2019, 8:02
August 17th, 2019, 12:29
johnnyBrandom wrote:Very happy you have been able to recover some/all of your data with minimal expense and thank you for reporting your experience as it may help others with similar circumstance which I believe is the intent of this forum.
BTW - I think there are "experts" here who may be interested in purchasing your magical fan which is clearly capable of repairing hard drives <sarcasm>because there is no way that thermal properties can play a role in HD data recovery - not possible</sarcasm> ...
Quote from @Dananjaya in thread https://forum.hddguru.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=38742Is there any special fridge/freezer brand do you know with this mirracle power of bad sector repair.
Your prayers have been answered @Dananjaya! Senordingdong (BTW - that is an awesome username) has found a magical fan that he may be willing to sell you!
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