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
August 16th, 2009, 12:16
Hi to all,
have this disk with this on terminal, afther a while i can get ID
Interface task reset
1024k x 16 buffer detected
ALPINE - 1_Disk S.15 02-08-03 15:03
Buzz - Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - $Switch to full int.
Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
Spin Ready
3.06 08-08-03 14:05
(P)PATA Reset
$Switch to full int.
$Master
Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$NIWOT TIME OSwitch to full int.
$UT
Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
$AutoRd Err 11 at 00f6ba.00.008b
Head Mask 0000 - NIWOT TIME OUT
Head Mask 0000 - Switch to full int.
Spin Ready
AT Er 00 Nwt Er 37 RdWr 0018.00.0000
ATA St 50 Er 01 Op 00 0,0000/0/00,00 01 00
Niwot: 0000068d ff 0000068d.0.000 00db 0000 e0e8 0001
AutoRd Err 47 at 000018.00.02f2
SCAN Error
AT Er 00 Nwt Er 43 RdWr 0018.00.0000
ATA St 50 Er 01 Op 00 0,0000/0/00,00 01 00
Niwot: 0000068d ff 0000068d.0.000 00db 0000 e0e8 0001
AutoRd Err 43 at 000018.00.02f9
CE Log EC=43 Rtype=25 OV=0 STStatus0
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$Switch to full int.
$AutoRd Err 11 at 00f6ba.00.008b
Head Mask 0000 - NIWOT TIME OUT
Switch to full int.
Spin Ready
SCAN Error
also i can edit some isolated sectors ok.
can this be the heads dirty?
Thanks
ZeBong
August 16th, 2009, 23:37
Could be dirty heads. It surely has trouble reading the data . . .
Contacts are shiny, no?
August 16th, 2009, 23:37
Could be dirty heads. It surely has trouble reading the data . . .
Contacts are shiny, no?
August 16th, 2009, 23:54
Maybe somebody dropped it
August 27th, 2009, 15:36
Afther change heads the same problem.
I find a way to get data is getting very vey slow.
Thanks
August 27th, 2009, 23:47
Maybe media damaged too im working on similar case momentus 7200.1 after did Head swap, still its showing same log but get some data.
August 28th, 2009, 7:50
Sometimes you get a case from a computer tech and they tried to fix it with video tutorial or following Scott's website, etc., then they realize how difficult it really is but it's too late and they already damage the media
Analogy: You can watch and study the violinist, but some people simply don't have 1 simple piece of the talent. They either not coordinated enough, and drop screws, etc. or not patient enough, or simply not adaptive enough, etc. Now everyone gets more unrecoverable drives than ever before. Even if you succeed with the mechanical part of the job, you often have the intellectual part of the test and fail there. After the tough lesson is learned, they have more respect for the DR company?
August 28th, 2009, 18:20
At this moment i could build MFT, and see the folders that i need, now the disk is taking the weekend for rest

me too
August 28th, 2009, 18:27
I think Doomer may be on the right track, with suggestion of dropping.
It may have not been dropped, but I believe somehow the media/platters have been tampered with. In this case I expect the heads are in pretty good condition, but the platters may be slightely misaligned or something of that nature.
I have come to find that seagate desktop drives (I am not sure about 7200.7, only certain series) are much more tolerent to platters shifts then I had originally though, only one type of platter shift though, not all.
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