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
August 10th, 2020, 3:05
The behavior of this drive was confusing me so i took the pcb off to have a look. Don't you love it when customers don't tell you they have been experimenting?
Thats a 1N4007. I like to find the youtube videos that suggest these experiments and check with the customer if its the video they watched to do it...
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August 10th, 2020, 7:23
WTF WTF WTF!!
August 10th, 2020, 18:12
That diode should have had no impact on the behaviour of the HDD. In fact Toshiba PCBs often [stupidly] use a Schottky rectifer in that position to protect against reverse voltages. Such diodes don't provide any overvoltage protection.
I would look elsewhere for the source of the "confusing" behaviour.
August 10th, 2020, 19:20
maybe the diode is not there for reverse voltage protection. Im not going to pretend to understand circuit theory more than a basic level, but I have read some write-ups of circuits that use components to do things like reduce signal noise, or unconventional uses of common components that when explained is, or appears to be, clever. Is there any other possible reason for a schottky in that possition?
August 10th, 2020, 19:33
A reversed biased Schottky diode wouldn't do anything in that position. In fact a reverse biased 1n4001 GP rectifer is often used as a "dickhead diode" in automotive electronics.
August 11th, 2020, 0:58
he would like to find
"I like to find the youtube videos that suggest these experiments and check with the customer if its the video they watched to do it..."
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