June 21st, 2014, 6:36
June 21st, 2014, 8:23
June 21st, 2014, 8:30
HaQue wrote:It may be possible to perform Flash recovery depending on what chipset it is. I don't recall seeing you post that anywhere. If it is Sandforce controller, I don't think there is a solution for most, if not all of them. If it is intel or Indilinx like an 1100 or something then a possibility.
I could do a recovery if you want to post depending on the chipset.
Do not start fiddling around with it until you have a good ide what each operation you try on it does.
If there is any firmware bug, corruption or an issue with the drive then unless you know exactly what that is and can take that into account when looking at the drive info, stats , settings and parameters... then you cant know what it is going to do next.
lets hope that there is a chance of recovery if the chipset is a sane one.
Slight possibility it could be a pcb issue did you want to ship it to AU?
all the best
June 21st, 2014, 9:03
PentiumCore wrote:I was told that I could open a support ticket @ OCZ's website to RMA it for them to attempt a recovery (apparently.)
PentiumCore wrote:I really don't understand modern hard drives, I really don't. Or could it just be my piss luck? I mean, I have PC's sitting here dating back to 1996 that I used to use constantly and up until the move over to SATA drives a few years ago I was completely oblivious to hard drive failures. All of these old PATA/IDE hard drives are still kicking at full throttle without a hiccup....
My first drive failure was back in 2007 being a 320GB WD followed by a Seagate both of which where SATA but luckily I was only using them as backup drives.
June 21st, 2014, 9:11
June 21st, 2014, 9:27
June 21st, 2014, 18:20
PentiumCore wrote:Hi, thanks for the replies, in order to take pics of the PCB won't I have to disassemble the SSD? If so I'm pretty sure that voids the warranty.
June 21st, 2014, 18:50
June 21st, 2014, 19:04
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