|
Hi,
I have a Samsung HD204UI drive that had its STJ009 mosfet burnt up from the board. I was hot plugging a chain of drives, and this drive - the first in the chain - possibly got a surge of some kind. Upon booting, the drive made a bunch of clicks, at first I thought it was one of my CD drives on the fritz, since one of them had a disc inside and sometimes they make odd noises as they struggle to read in a disc on bootup. There was also a burnt smell, which I disregarded at first because previously I was working on an unrelated project that involved heat gunning a cable harness; it had the same smell, which I mistook for residue from that project.
Unfortunately upon bootup I found that this Samsung drive was missing.
On a second bootup attempt I noticed the fast clicking sound again, and after removing and inspecting the drive I saw the physical damage on the PCB: the STJ009 mosfet was completely destroyed, it's top cracked open, and left smoke traces on the PCB. After doing some research, I concluded that my choices are 1. replacing the blown STJ009 mosfet 2. replacing the entire PCB from a donor drive, then exchanging the firmware between the two drives 3. professional data recovery
As I have a desoldering station and could source another Samsung drive that used the STJ009, I opted for the first choice. The other two ones cannot be put into motion during the weekend anyway. A problem was that the traces around the mosfet had been burnt up so bad, that they could not be desoldered from the corpse of the mosfet and had to be cut off. However, I managed to map up the traces, partially due to others on this forum posting pictures of the PCB with the chip removed, and partially because the drive I used as the ic donor (a Samsung HD103UJ with over 48k hours clocked on it) used the exact same layout. The mosfet pins 5-8 are connected to a b240 diode and a choke. Pins 1-3 connect to the left side of the 474 resistor, as well as the bottom of the component immediately to the right of the mosfet (a ceramic cap?). Pin 4 connects to the right side of the 474 resistor.
I wired up everything in this way using 28AWG kynar wire, double checked if there are no shorts. I also checked all resistors on the board (all show resistance), as well as the TVS diodes in the power input (which also show resistance), so I was hoping that only the mosfet was bad.
Unfortunately upon boot I got the same clicking noise, and the mosfet burned up again... this time I removed it once it started clicking, but the top of the chip bubbling up and it had a burnt plastic smell as before. So it is most likely dead now.
What else can I diagnose on the board - voltages and such, to narrow down the problem as to why the mosfet burns up? I have a basic multimeter, as far as I know it can check for voltage, resistance, amperage (never used it for that though), continuity, and some form of battery test. I may be able to source a third mosfet on the weekend, and I'd like to do anything within my skills to restore the data from the drive - as long as it does not cause potential damage to the platters themselves.
Does the repeated mosfet burning, and the clicking of the drive at power-on indicate permanent damage in the head motor, that would require professional data recovery? I mean, do the symptoms indicate a damaged motor? The mosfet was blown, but none of the diodes near the power connector were, and the resistors on the PCB are all in working order. Upon powerup, the drive spins up properly, but the read head clicks 15 times and then the entire drive spins down. There is no buzzing sound that indicates a stuck motor, and no chirping that would indicate the head damaging the platter (but perhaps I'm just being overly hopeful when saying this).
As an experiment, I might connect up the hd103uj donor drive that is now missing its mosfet, just to see if it produces the same symptoms, provided that this does not cause permanent motor damage...
|