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
September 5th, 2011, 10:51
Hi all
I have a case with a ST3640323AS (Barracuda .11 640GB).
This came with a seized motor.
I unjammed the motor (using Nikola's Brute Force tool) and then when I mount disk on pc3k it clicks.
So far so good, I thought heads are bad too, but after a while I noticed that despite the persistant clicks, disk detects with zero capacity (Model, Serial, FW are displayed correctly) and gives on terminal LED CC errors (!).
I'm thinking this is definitely bad heads but i just wanted to check / share if anyone else has seen this.
EDIT: LED CC is:
- Code:
LED: 000000CC FAddr: 0024814B
September 5th, 2011, 10:54
Hi,
It could be bad heads, what would be normal in a case like this.
But are you sure the spindle is rotating totally free now?
September 5th, 2011, 10:57
dmarques wrote:Hi,
It could be bad heads, what would be normal in a case like this.
But are you sure the spindle is rotating totally free now?
Yes. Spindle is free now.
September 5th, 2011, 10:59
But rotating at the correct speed? Have you measured it?
I'm asking this because using brute force on those ones, normally they take some time to get to it's regular speed.
September 5th, 2011, 11:09
have you try the solution to unlock the led000C case?
September 5th, 2011, 11:15
I would imagine you have some bad heads here too, which wouldn't be surprising since the motor spindle was probably due to a fall? Do you have Nikola's headswap tool for this series? Mine will be arriving tomorrow
September 5th, 2011, 11:18
italian-recovery wrote:have you try the solution to unlock the led000C case?
The LED error is a symptom of a problem, not actually a failure as such. If for some reason SA cannot load and HDD cannot reach a ready state, LED error will display. That is what happens here.
Problem is, as dmarques pointed out, that spindle probably is not rotating at correct speed.
Other problem could be that bearing/bearings are damaged and platter does not rotate perfectly. In this situation there is chance of damage to media surface.
Assuming platter rotates evenly with no risk of damage to media, then be patient with it and correct RPM can (sometimes) be reached.
But you should also consider the possibility of heads damage.
But ultimately, the choice is yours to make...
September 5th, 2011, 11:20
dmarques wrote:But rotating at the correct speed? Have you measured it?
I'm asking this because using brute force on those ones, normally they take some time to get to it's regular speed.
How would you measure the rpm out of curiosity?
Loki
September 5th, 2011, 11:42
With a stroboscope.
September 5th, 2011, 12:00
I haven't measured rpm but it sounds good and ATA register comes RDY on PC3K (if that means anything).
I could open hdd in clean room and see if it rotates erratically or behaves strangely, or check if it loses speed or so...
italian-recovery wrote:have you try the solution to unlock the led000C case?
Yes. With UDMA auto feature it fails on spin up with 'Disk not ready' error.
I tried to enter commands manually, it went well until i attempted to clear SMART, where process failed (with another LED CC error).
Nick_CT wrote:I would imagine you have some bad heads here too, which wouldn't be surprising since the motor spindle was probably due to a fall? Do you have Nikola's headswap tool for this series? Mine will be arriving tomorrow

Yes, I have the tools (they work pretty well too!) but I don't have a donor currently.
Since disk clicks I will go ahead and order spare parts for this and try a head change to see if this fixes the problem.
Thanks everyone for the feedback
September 5th, 2011, 12:07
dmarques wrote:With a stroboscope.
Would this be any good? ( something else for me tool kit

)
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll? ... ink:top:enLoki
September 5th, 2011, 12:29
Yes, something like it.
Now check the differences between different models.
@northwind: let's wait and see
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