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
May 30th, 2012, 3:10
Hey guys,
I have a Seagate ST3160318AS 7200.12 drive that has been giving me extremely low speeds(3-4MB/s). I am going to replace the drive as data is not an important criteria here. But I want to know if the power supply could be responsible for this

If I connect a new HDD to a screwed power connection , the new HDD could also be ruined

How to check if the power is alright?
May 30th, 2012, 4:03
Why do you think this is a power issue in the first place? Seems unlikely to me. You could probably test the PSU with a PSU tester:
http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_trksid= ... r&_sacat=0
May 30th, 2012, 4:56
To me, when this question arises ("is the power supply ok?"), I just change the PSU.
Allow me to say that the PSU is probably the most important part of a machine and yes, it can completely ruin a hard drive before you even think "BOOM".
May 30th, 2012, 4:58
Those PSU testers are useless. Break out a DVOM and check volatages under a load.
May 30th, 2012, 5:44
need-help-diagnosing-issue-with-seagate-st3750330as-t15003.html#p99328The one I have attached the pic is reliable up today, but only a complete diagnose with LOAD and meter (possibly oscilloscope to weed out filtering problems) can tell everything.
However , it can give a quick go-no go indication + test of the power good section.
May 30th, 2012, 13:20
Usually, when it comes to drive throughput, Power Supplies aren't a big issue. If it's not working, you'll know it, because you'll see a lot of system hangups and strange and random hard reboots.
May 30th, 2012, 23:51
Everything else on the system is working fine.i guess there are several connectors that can power my hdd .how to identify them?
May 31st, 2012, 4:57
harddriverecovery wrote:Usually, when it comes to drive throughput, Power Supplies aren't a big issue.

NOT TRUE.
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