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
February 22nd, 2012, 12:03
Hi,
Just received a Lexar 32GB flash drive that was dropped by the client. When it was dropped, the controller chip fell off (breaking half or so of the legs off with it).
Model: LJDTT32G-000-1001V
Controller Chip: SW3253L
Was wondering if anyone has had success with this particular model, as well as if anyone knows if the controller cards are mostly interchangeable or not. I can upload pictures later if it will help.
Dizi
February 22nd, 2012, 12:10
Dizidago357 wrote:When it was dropped, the controller chip fell off (breaking half or so of the legs off with it).
I think the customer does not tell you the whole story...
February 22nd, 2012, 12:17
hddguy wrote:Dizidago357 wrote:When it was dropped, the controller chip fell off (breaking half or so of the legs off with it).
I think the customer does not tell you the whole story...
You know, customer dropped it under his foot, or the wheel of his desk chair
February 22nd, 2012, 12:25
As a matter of fact here
All or let`s say 90% of my clients are Great and good on not saying what was really happened
they just wanted to know how good you are in solving puzzles
never rely on what they say,
February 22nd, 2012, 13:16
We don't pay too much mind to what they say normally anyways unless it directly hurts our chances of recovery (drive dropped, then I scanned it for two days, etc.). We usually just focus on getting the data, not how the medium came to be broken.
Does anyone know if the controllers are cross-compatible? Or do we need to match the code on the controller exactly?
Dizi
February 22nd, 2012, 17:38
Dizidago357 wrote:Hi,
Just received a Lexar 32GB flash drive that was dropped by the client. When it was dropped, the controller chip fell off (breaking half or so of the legs off with it).
Model: LJDTT32G-000-1001V
Controller Chip: SW3253L
Was wondering if anyone has had success with this particular model, as well as if anyone knows if the controller cards are mostly interchangeable or not. I can upload pictures later if it will help.
Dizi
Never seen that controller chip, you have a pic?
February 23rd, 2012, 1:36
Dizidago357 wrote:Model: LJDTT32G-000-1001V
Controller Chip: SW3253L
Symwave ???
February 23rd, 2012, 5:35
pcimage wrote:Dizidago357 wrote:Hi,
Just received a Lexar 32GB flash drive that was dropped by the client. When it was dropped, the controller chip fell off (breaking half or so of the legs off with it).
Model: LJDTT32G-000-1001V
Controller Chip: SW3253L
Was wondering if anyone has had success with this particular model, as well as if anyone knows if the controller cards are mostly interchangeable or not. I can upload pictures later if it will help.
Dizi
Never seen that controller chip, you have a pic?
I think he means S
M3253L
February 23rd, 2012, 6:06
hddguy wrote:pcimage wrote:Dizidago357 wrote:Hi,
Just received a Lexar 32GB flash drive that was dropped by the client. When it was dropped, the controller chip fell off (breaking half or so of the legs off with it).
Model: LJDTT32G-000-1001V
Controller Chip: SW3253L
Was wondering if anyone has had success with this particular model, as well as if anyone knows if the controller cards are mostly interchangeable or not. I can upload pictures later if it will help.
Dizi
Never seen that controller chip, you have a pic?
I think he means S
M3253L

Now that makes sense!

Almost certainly do-able with flash memory removal and reconstruction. Will have XOR of some sort for sure.
February 23rd, 2012, 11:44
Yes, it does look like SM instead of SW. I attached a few pictures (didn't come out too great, as the controller card code is faded a bit).
Also attached a picture of some of the broken legs (along the left and right sides, and on the right you can clearly see the contrasts between legs being there and legs missing).
We're thinking this may be a bit over our heads (32GB flash drive as opposed to 2 or 4GB like we typically receive). Anyone near the central US want to take a crack at this one? Send me a quote and we can talk. The two data chips don't look cracked (from the top anyways), so presumably the main issue will be working with the reconstruction. After quotes, I can relay them to the customer and see what they would like to do.
Dizi
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February 23rd, 2012, 12:20
if you have experience working with flash extract the data from the NAND chips, otherwise it would be best to outsource. Controller has to be specific if you want to try and replace the controller. However there is also a good chance that additional components might have been damaged.
February 23rd, 2012, 13:04
This case should not be so difficult to recover with the right tools and knowledge. There are a few guys here who can deal with this for you, maybe even an opportunity for a partner program you could benefit from.
Do you have any software / hardware for recovering from the NAND chips yourself?
February 23rd, 2012, 15:02
Can help in UK, but sure there's guys nearer you
February 23rd, 2012, 16:41
Only thing we have for this is Flash Doctor, but we're not too confident about even attempting and possibly making a bad situation worse. Did want to note that on the board itself, when the controller chip came off it took a few of the contact points with it. Spoke with Jon at DataSavers and he's not too optimistic due to that, but would anyone else want to try? Or can you recommend anyone near central or east coast US?
Dizi
February 23rd, 2012, 17:49
Wise decission, flash doctor in it's current condition is only good as a paper weight. Can you post a high resolution picture?
Most important is the NAND chips. You should have 2 of them. If the NAND chips have not been damaged, a recovery should be possible.
February 23rd, 2012, 17:53
quasimodo wrote:Wise decission, flash doctor in it's current condition is only good as a paper weight. Can you post a high resolution picture?
Most important is the NAND chips. You should have 2 of them. If the NAND chips have not been damaged, a recovery should be possible.
Couldn't agree more, flash doctor stands little chance of recovering this

Like Quasimodo says, as long as the actual flash chips are OK then it should be recoverable with a decent tool like Soft Center Flash Extractor.
February 24th, 2012, 4:23
Dizidago357 wrote:Spoke with Jon at DataSavers and he's not too optimistic due to that, but would anyone else want to try? Or can you recommend anyone near central or east coast US?
Did you explain to him that the
controller pins came off and not the nand chips' pins? Because when I first read your post I thought the nand chips' pins came off (and that would be possibly game over). Then when I saw the pics you posted I realized it is the controller you were talking about.
I second (third) everyone's opinion, this is definitely do-able (assuming no damage to nand chips).
February 24th, 2012, 4:37
Dizidago357 wrote:I attached a few pictures (didn't come out too great, as the controller card code is faded a bit).
That's gotta be an understatement. Did you try scanning the chip?
BTW, does your image editing software have a crop feature? ;-|
February 24th, 2012, 11:24
@northwind,
Yes, we did explain that, we spoke with him on the phone. The tech that called him explained that the concern was that some of the actual contacts came off of the board with the controller chip, meaning a new one cannot be attached to that board.
@fzabkar,
We did try scanning the chip into the machine, but it didn't come out very well at all (worse than the pictures).
The client needed the data as soon as they could, and money was not really a concern for them, so we opted to send it to OnTrack. Update you guys further when we hear from them.
Dizi
February 24th, 2012, 11:27
Dizidago357 wrote:@northwind,
Yes, we did explain that, we spoke with him on the phone. The tech that called him explained that the concern was that some of the actual contacts came off of the board with the controller chip, meaning a new one cannot be attached to that board.
This SM controller should not be so difficult to work with, regarding recovery from the NAND memory, so I am surprised at this...
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