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 12th, 2021, 15:12
Hello,
I have a HGST He10 (model number HUH721010ALE600) that was used in an USB enclosure. One day it was not willing to turn on, it just emitted some kind of strange high pitched electronic-like noise and I smelt something bad. Detaching the PCB shows damage near the power plug (I have tested the enclosure with another hard drive that had serious media problems and the same happened, it even smoked).
I am not a data recovery professional just an enthusiast. I have no non-backed up date on the drive, I'm just curious if it would be possible to repair it - I have friends with soldering skills.
Any comments are appreciated. Thanks in advance and have a nice day.
October 12th, 2021, 15:38
Remove the diode and check for a short.
October 12th, 2021, 16:37
Also check the fuse.
Could we see the PCB in the enclosure? I suspect that its 5V regulator has failed with a short from input to output.
October 13th, 2021, 14:42
fzabkar wrote:Also check the fuse.
Could we see the PCB in the enclosure? I suspect that its 5V regulator has failed with a short from input to output.
Thanks for your reply fzabkar. Could you please clarify where the fuse is?
I think you are right. We have measured the output of the AC adapter and it is fine (12.1V), here are the pictures of the enclosure, it is branded Orico. What I have highlighted on the second picture is very hot.
October 13th, 2021, 15:14
See attachment.
- Attachments
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- TVS_diode_fuse.jpg (56.68 KiB) Viewed 9942 times
October 13th, 2021, 15:37
fzabkar wrote:See attachment.
Thank you very much. So you think if I'm lucky I might end up with a working drive after replacing the 5V TVS diode and the fuse(s) if necessary?
October 13th, 2021, 16:11
Springdale wrote:So you think if I'm lucky I might end up with a working drive after replacing the 5V TVS diode and the fuse(s) if necessary?
You just need to replace the fuse or bypass it, if there are no other problems. Remove the shorted TVS diode, of course.
As for the bridge PCB, I suspect that the 8-pin IC under the DC socket is the culprit.
TVS Diode FAQ:
http://www.hddoracle.com/viewtopic.php?f=100&t=86
October 16th, 2021, 15:13
Thank you very much. Appreciate your help! Wishing all the best.
October 18th, 2021, 10:32
It is probably sufficient to do what Franc said if you only want to copy the data off, but for continued protection you need to replace the failed components.
pepe
October 22nd, 2021, 11:34
pepe wrote:It is probably sufficient to do what Franc said if you only want to copy the data off, but for continued protection you need to replace the failed components.
pepe
Thanks pepe, I understand that, it is also mentioned in the article linked by fzabkar.
Please check my other topic, I would be interested in your opinion.
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