August 29th, 2022, 13:44
August 30th, 2022, 6:58
August 30th, 2022, 9:23
northwind wrote:I just hope you're trolling.
August 30th, 2022, 13:14
August 30th, 2022, 13:57
rickest wrote:Yeah stupid to have something important on an old drive but lesson learned and now switching storage to 6 "Samsung 980 PRO M.2 NVMe SSD 2TB" to never deal with mechanical hard drives again.
August 30th, 2022, 17:36
August 31st, 2022, 4:04
September 2nd, 2022, 15:05
northwind wrote:I just hope you're trolling.
rickest wrote:northwind wrote:I just hope you're trolling.
Not trolling at all.Need help with a solution, removing the bios chip I can probably manage but to solder it back on with an old equipment kit I can tell I would mess something up.
So will the duct tape solution work if I manage to line the connectors up properly?
DRUG wrote:This is wrong on so many levels xD
I'll just give a hint because I wont even touch on the "clicking of death" story.
Hint: the drives you are using now... Just do regular backups.
ddrecovery wrote:rickest wrote:Yeah stupid to have something important on an old drive but lesson learned and now switching storage to 6 "Samsung 980 PRO M.2 NVMe SSD 2TB" to never deal with mechanical hard drives again.
1. You need professional help now you have opened your drive.
2. How do you have your SSDs configured.
3. Failure rate of an SSD is about the same as a HDD.
4. 95% of HDDs are recoverable, only 50% of SSDs are recoverable.
pepe wrote:The rom chip needs to be soldered. Period. Duct tape is OK for everything else you can think of but not for this one.
Data may be corrupt due to the high suppy voltage the pcb fed to the preamp, on top of contamination that probably entered when the drive was opened. Heads are also prone to get misaligned when the lid is taken off (on these drives at least).
+1 for what ddrecovery said.
pepe
dick wrote:Sorry to say but your plan of action is the equivalent of performing a complex medical intervention using a bread knife with the patient laying on a sun bed.
September 3rd, 2022, 10:54
September 3rd, 2022, 10:57
Anyway, this drive had the "clicking of death" and at first I thought it was the heads or arms scraping against the disc but I did open it up and saw no damage at all.
I swapped the bios chip with a heatgun and put a rectangle strip of duct tape on it to hold it in place and applied some weight on it to press it down and then poked each connector with a soldering iron and its working now im doing a clone of it as im writing this message.
September 4th, 2022, 9:15
pepe wrote:thanks for the kind words, they warmed my heart for today
In fact, some of it helped you a lot coz you apparently soldered the chip on the new board and got it working. Why did you not use DT at the end?
It's a bit of luck as well coz you could have smashed it with the contamination as well.
pepe
dick wrote:Anyway, this drive had the "clicking of death" and at first I thought it was the heads or arms scraping against the disc but I did open it up and saw no damage at all.
And then you put the cover back on and later there were no issues?I swapped the bios chip with a heatgun and put a rectangle strip of duct tape on it to hold it in place and applied some weight on it to press it down and then poked each connector with a soldering iron and its working now im doing a clone of it as im writing this message.
If that is the case then well done. I would now suggest you go out and buy a lottery ticket. May the luck go with you.
September 5th, 2022, 16:54
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