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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WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 4:49

Hi,

I'm trying to figure out what's wrong with this drive. I had this in an external drive till I knocked it off my coffee table and now it won't work. I plug it into the PC but BIOS won't detect it. (It rather say NONE it just show " " blank in the drive detection.

I don't hear typical loud clicking noise but I can hear the drive spin with very quiet clicking like noise inside then the motor powers off.... I looked the PCB inside and outside like other people mentioned in the forum, but I do not see anythging burnt.

I have a same WD5000AAKS but 65TMA0 portion is a bit different.


Thank you!!!!

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 4:53

Spindle K.O :D

-BlackST (c) 2009


PS : Possible surface scratches and head crash to surface is possible, also

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 5:34

Hi cryoborgofthevenus,

If it's Spindle K.O, how can I find out?

should I place the platters in the working donor drive in a clean room? At least I do have access to the clean room.

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 5:45

No, it spins. So you have head stack KO and likely media damage. Plus, if you open the lid you loose alignment. IF recoverable, it's in the 2000$/EUR range. Period.

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 5:47

Btw If you want to hire a clean room...

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 5:49

netwalker wrote:Hi cryoborgofthevenus,

If it's Spindle K.O, how can I find out?

should I place the platters in the working donor drive in a clean room? At least I do have access to the clean room.

Yes, place the platters in a donor. I recommend using a Seagate as a donor as they are easier to work with. :lol:

Actually only kidding, if you want to lose the data you will attempt platter swap yourself. You have more chance of getting it to work a seagate donor drive than a western digital.

be prepared to pay big bucks to recover the data. You have no other choice if data is important to you.

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 5:57

That "period" word is what I like from BlackST :D

@ netwalker, having access to clean room is not "the solution". This model combined with this kind of situation is a difficult task to do. Opening up drives' cover is easy, swapping headstack is easy, UNLESS that drive is WD :D (quoted from a post by Odiferous, as i recall) when unknown anomalies joined the fun....errrr....the task :D

DR pro even don't like to deal with this kind of damaged WD drives.

Spindle might not 100% K.O, unstable in my opinion. The possibility of platter misalignment after being dropped is the problem. Since this is high density drive from WD, a small drop can cause a major damage to its original condition. And, honestly, I hate myself when doing this "exhausting" alignment against WD :D

If you never do this, just don't DIY. Send the drive to DR pro near your place.

Re: WD5000AAKS 65TMA0 Not Detected

February 1st, 2009, 6:02

HDD Spaz wrote:Yes, place the platters in a donor. I recommend using a Seagate as a donor as they are easier to work with. :lol:

LOL :mrgreen:

Yes, I agree. Seagate drives are rather easy to work with in this same situation
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