March 29th, 2013, 17:31
March 31st, 2013, 15:35
PCGuru wrote:This is the Firewire-800 plus USB version. Unlike the USB only Passport drives, it has a standard SATA drive plus a bridge board with an Oxford Semiconductor OXUF943SE controller that includes hardware encryption.
The owner fried the bridge board by plugging a Firewire 400 cable into his Mac upside down. If I connect just the SATA drive is reads fine, appears healthy, but all the sectors are encrypted. Another message thread here suggested that I could use the bridge board from a similar drive and it would read the key off a sector near the end of the drive. I tried this and it did not work. Then I noticed that the two drives I have here, though both say model WDBAAE5000ASL-00, and both are marked R/N C3B, they have slightly different bridge boards. The bad bridge board is 4061-705063-003 revision AB but the donor drive bridge board is revision AM.
I also noticed that the two bridge boards have a slightly different Oxford chips. The bad board has OXUF943SE-LQAG but the donor drive is OXUF943SE-LQCG.
I had hoped that it would be possible to move a small flash chip with the encrption key from the old board to the new one but I am not certain which chip would store it: is it in the U2 Winbond chip, or in one of two smaller 8 legged chips (Q3 marked 4840 and Q8 marked 4425)? And would this even work considering that they have a different revision of the controller?
In thread http://forum.hddguru.com/passport-studio-recovery-issues-due-encryption-t24767.html Dark-Sider appears to have a similar problem, and Doomer suggests that there is a difference according to year of manufacture.
Does anyone happen to have a schematic of this board? If so we might work out which chips have been damaged. has anyone had success reviving one of these bridge boards?
March 31st, 2013, 18:51
April 2nd, 2013, 13:13
April 2nd, 2013, 13:38
PCGuru wrote:This is the Firewire-800 plus USB version. Unlike the USB only Passport drives, it has a standard SATA drive plus a bridge board with an Oxford Semiconductor OXUF943SE controller that includes hardware encryption.
The owner fried the bridge board by plugging a Firewire 400 cable into his Mac upside down. If I connect just the SATA drive is reads fine, appears healthy, but all the sectors are encrypted. Another message thread here suggested that I could use the bridge board from a similar drive and it would read the key off a sector near the end of the drive. I tried this and it did not work. Then I noticed that the two drives I have here, though both say model WDBAAE5000ASL-00, and both are marked R/N C3B, they have slightly different bridge boards. The bad bridge board is 4061-705063-003 revision AB but the donor drive bridge board is revision AM.
I also noticed that the two bridge boards have a slightly different Oxford chips. The bad board has OXUF943SE-LQAG but the donor drive is OXUF943SE-LQCG.
I had hoped that it would be possible to move a small flash chip with the encrption key from the old board to the new one but I am not certain which chip would store it: is it in the U2 Winbond chip, or in one of two smaller 8 legged chips (Q3 marked 4840 and Q8 marked 4425)? And would this even work considering that they have a different revision of the controller?
In thread http://forum.hddguru.com/passport-studio-recovery-issues-due-encryption-t24767.html Dark-Sider appears to have a similar problem, and Doomer suggests that there is a difference according to year of manufacture.
Does anyone happen to have a schematic of this board? If so we might work out which chips have been damaged. has anyone had success reviving one of these bridge boards?
April 2nd, 2013, 14:17
April 2nd, 2013, 15:44
einstein9 wrote:could you post here the hdd model (from inside)
not the WDBAAE5000ASL label from outside
April 2nd, 2013, 16:35
PCGuru wrote:fzabkar, thank you for your comments but I don't see a TI chip. I attach a close up of the main chip markings: the OXUF943SE-LQAC controller apparently combines FW, USB, SATA and encryption. http://www.plxtech.com/products/consumer/oxuf943se But then I don't see why they needed the LSI FW843 chip, which is also apparently a FW800 controller?
April 2nd, 2013, 16:38
PCGuru wrote:I had hoped that it would be possible to move a small flash chip with the encrption key from the old board to the new one but I am not certain which chip would store it: is it in the U2 Winbond chip, or in one of two smaller 8 legged chips (Q3 marked 4840 and Q8 marked 4425)?
April 2nd, 2013, 17:23
Doomer wrote:There is a version of similar PCB but with two FW800 ports (Revision 705110-002)
April 2nd, 2013, 18:30
PCGuru wrote:I had hoped that it would be possible to move a small flash chip with the encrption key from the old board to the new one but I am not certain which chip would store it: is it in the U2 Winbond chip, or in one of two smaller 8 legged chips (Q3 marked 4840 and Q8 marked 4425)?
April 2nd, 2013, 18:32
April 2nd, 2013, 18:51
April 2nd, 2013, 21:34
fzabkar wrote:Doomer wrote:There is a version of similar PCB but with two FW800 ports (Revision 705110-002)
I don't know if it's the same number, but I found this while I was searching for the OP's PCB:
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8458/8021 ... c1c6_b.jpg
April 2nd, 2013, 21:40
PCGuru wrote:Perhaps it is not really encrypted but simply a quick substitute cipher?
April 3rd, 2013, 2:05
April 3rd, 2013, 4:18
Randy wrote:I'm sure, you already done that, but, did you checked this burnt board for blown fuses, zero ohm resistors, torn inductor coils?
Does ICs on the board powered with correct voltage, and ground pins still connected to the ground? Is they abnormally hot, while board is powered?
On a first foto i can see some DC/DC converter IC with it's coil and diode on the other side. If it so, is it working correct?
Maybe, it will be more easy to repair this burnt board (if it possible), instead of trying decrypt the data with the good one?
April 3rd, 2013, 13:47
April 3rd, 2013, 15:29
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