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
October 16th, 2013, 20:17
hello can someone give us some advice
i got a seagate barracuda 7200.11 500gb
this was working in my arcade machine and has now just clicks away
i ran atola and it comes back head-stack fail.
the drive itself is cloned into the arcade machine
by a id code.
so the only way is to get a replacement headstack to get it working again
can someone tell us what headstack will work with this hard drive no problem
enclose is the information
SN: 9QM37EEP
P/N 9BX154-303
FIRMWARE SD15
DATE CODE 08402
SITE CODE KRATSG
PRODUCT OF THAILAND
PCB 100466725 REV A
BAR CODE 100468974 J
October 17th, 2013, 3:12
Hi craig,
For this drives only model and the first 3 symbols of the S/N are enough.
Regards
Maestro
October 17th, 2013, 10:15
Sometimes... you can get away with just matching the 2nd and 3rd of the serial... (1st is manufacturing plant).... best practice when using this method is dates... get em as close as poss..
October 17th, 2013, 18:07
hello thanks for your advice and help guys
i did a head stack replacement once i did this i booted my arcade machine up
and it loaded up fine no other issues
just hope nothing else goes wrong
as the drives cost $500 each
October 18th, 2013, 2:22
You replaced the heads in a 500gb 7200.11 and it booted straight up in the machine and worked with no issues??
I'm finding that very difficult to believe!!

Unless I'm missing something??
October 18th, 2013, 9:27
the correct way and information for headstack replacement
must match the following
Full Model Number
Site code
Full part number or first 3 characters in serial number
Firmware. match
October 18th, 2013, 9:52
I have to agree with PCImage, cant see it booting like new after head change. Also, if your paying $1 per GB on your donors your getting a raw deal...
October 18th, 2013, 10:07
the drives for arcade machines are expensive not cheap.
what your saying is that the id has to be cloned to the new drive
which i did
explain why it would not work
October 18th, 2013, 10:11
craig6928 wrote:the drives for arcade machines are expensive not cheap.
what your saying is that the id has to be cloned to the new drive
which i did
explain why it would not work
The HDD is independant of its original operating environment when used as parts. It does not have to be from the same machine, just needs to be compatible in that parts are interchangeable.
Also, you did not mention it was cloned:
craig6928 wrote:
i did a head stack replacement once i did this i booted my arcade machine up
and it loaded up fine no other issues
What is unlikely is to work with the repaired disk with no errors. Working with a clone is a different story as the clone would never have failed and never have needed repairs
October 18th, 2013, 10:33
well you can clone the hard drive no problem
later on
but with arcade machines the id is matched with the system and software
when it loads up
if it does not match it fails
this is to stop you from copying it to other arcade machines
but by changing or cloning the id it works fine.
i know these drives are not that great.
and are well known for failing.
for now its working
October 18th, 2013, 10:50
craig6928 wrote:the drives for arcade machines are expensive not cheap.
what your saying is that the id has to be cloned to the new drive
which i did explain why it would not work
You did not mention this, hence my sceptism!
Although I think communication wires have got crossed somewhere along the line

Whatever, glad you got it working!
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