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One of my WD3000 drives recently failed. It spins up, clicks twice, spins back down, and gives up after a few attempts. From what I've read on this forum, it seems to be a somewhat common failure. No signs of burnt components on the PCB, but I noted that the Smooth IC was getting very hot during the power-up attempts. For $8 USD, I sourced a new Smooth IC from softcom.com and replaced it. No success and the drive behaves the same. As another attempt, I got a hold of a WD3200-00KFA0 which has the same PCB number (2060-701314-002) and swapped PCB's along with U12. Still no success and I'm guessing this is now likely a head and/or preamp failure? I'm at a crossroads as to whether I should spend more time with it. My WD3200-00KFA0 drive might be a suitable head donor for the failed (WD3000-00KFA0), but from what I've read on this forum, I probably won't have any success since I have no experience swapping heads or platters.
The data on the failed drive is not ultra-critical. Its value to me is probably around 100 bucks - certainly too little to pay a professional company to get the data off my drive. So, do I keep experimenting and possibly try a head swap since I have nothing to loose - it could be a neat learning experience even though I have very low chance of success? Or should I stop wasting my time and toss the dead drive in the trash? Any other options?
Thanks for the wealth of information. It has helped me make some fair attempts at repairing my drive.
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