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 6th, 2019, 0:33
I have two Toshiba HDD's-- everything is the exact same, ie, CYL16383, H16, S63
500GB-LBA 976,773,168 Sectors on both of them././.
My Question is:
The voltage on the old HD is +5 VDC /1.1Amp
The voltage on the new HD is +5VDC and 1.0Amp
The actuator has failed on the old HDD and it took .1 Amp more in power to operate..
Will this be a failure from the start if I do this swap???
November 6th, 2019, 16:08
Why on Earth are you swapping platters?
Sorry to say, this is a DIY disaster waiting to happen
November 6th, 2019, 17:37
I have done several over the years. Fortunately, I have always located and exact match. This biggest thing is .. take your time, use gorilla tape to press yo the sides of there is more than one platter.. you can make some very nifty tools to keep head separation.. it's not to bad.. I have had some fails along the way. P
November 6th, 2019, 18:08
If the "actuator" failed, then why are you swapping the platters rather than the actuator?
November 6th, 2019, 22:58
I am pretty sure it's all non recoverable. It was dropped from about 15' in the air. HD had a pretty good dent on the out side.. Pretty sure I sure I had multiple issues with this HD
Because of the impact.. Just ruling it out. When the hard drive was dropped a tiny pin broke that supports the magnets position.
November 7th, 2019, 5:10
fzabkar wrote:If the "actuator" failed, then why are you swapping the platters rather than the actuator?
Exactly so!
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