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| Samsung Evo 860 500GB Died after wake from hibernate http://forum.hddguru.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=45070 |
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| Author: | hongducwb [ January 29th, 2025, 15:56 ] |
| Post subject: | Samsung Evo 860 500GB Died after wake from hibernate |
Windows kept warning me to back up my data regularly, but I ignored it because my SSD seemed perfectly fine—it had 66% health, as far as I knew. On October 30, 2024, I put my SSD into hibernation, and when I woke it up on the afternoon of October 31, my PC took a long time to boot and then failed, saying "No bootable device" I checked the BIOS, and my Samsung 860 Evo was still recognized, but I couldn't do anything with it. I tried using a SATA-to-USB adapter to connect it to another Windows system for diagnosis, but it took 10–20 minutes just to be detected. In Disk Management, the SSD showed up as "Not Initialized." Victoria and HDD Sentinel could detect the drive's name and basic details, but nothing more, SMART is failed. I searched online and found a power cycle method, but it didn’t help. So, I decided to try baking the SSD—I heated it to 200°C for 5 minutes (twice), but on the second attempt, the NAND chip got misaligned (screenshot: https://i.imgur.com/mkwe1df.png). I then attempted to reball the NAND chip. This time, I had to manually short two points (screenshot https://i.imgur.com/edqsHdU.png ) to make the SATA-to-USB 3.0 adapter detect the drive in Windows. After 10–20 minutes, it showed up as a Samsung 860 Evo, but still remained "Not Initialized." I even tried repairing traces and soldering components back onto the board (screenshot https://i.imgur.com/2LEQKz3.png). I attempted to solder a tiny capacitor https://i.imgur.com/0X4kyOK.png back in place, but my needle tweezers caused it to disappear—I couldn’t find it anymore. So, I just bridged the connection without the capacitor (I don't know if this is the reason I need to manually short it for Windows to detect the drive.) Now, my plan is to find another Samsung 860 Evo 500GB and try swapping my NAND onto it, but I’m not sure if it will work or not. Hard Disk Summary Quote: Hard Disk Number,8 Interface,SAT Standard USB/ATA Hard Disk Model ID,Samsung SSD 860 EVO 500GB Firmware Revision,RVT04B6Q Hard Disk Serial Number,S3Z4NB0M601688A SSD Controller,Samsung Total Size,476937 MB Power State,Active ATA Information Hard Disk Cylinders,969021 Hard Disk Heads,16 Hard Disk Sectors,63 ATA Revision,ACS-4 Revision 5 Transport Version,SATA Rev 3.2 Total Sectors,976773168 Bytes Per Sector,512 Multiple Sectors,1 Error Correction Bytes,0 Unformatted Capacity,476940 MB Maximum PIO Mode,4 Maximum Multiword DMA Mode,2 Highest Possible Transfer Rate,S-ATA Gen3 Signaling Speed (6 Gps) Negotiated Transfer Rate,S-ATA II Signaling Speed (3 Gps) Minimum multiword DMA Transfer Time,120 ns Recommended Multiword DMA Transfer Time,120 ns Minimum PIO Transfer Time Without IORDY,120 ns Minimum PIO Transfer Time With IORDY,120 ns ATA Control Byte,Valid ATA Checksum Value,Valid Acoustic Management Configuration Acoustic Management,Not supported Acoustic Management,Disabled Current Acoustic Level,Default (00h) Recommended Acoustic Level,Default (00h) ATA Features Read Ahead Buffer,"Supported, Enabled" DMA,Supported Ultra DMA,Supported S.M.A.R.T.,Supported Power Management,Supported Write Cache,Supported Host Protected Area,Supported HPA Security Extensions,Supported Advanced Power Management,Not supported Extended Power Management,Not supported Power Up In Standby,Not supported 48-bit LBA Addressing,Supported Device Configuration Overlay,Supported IORDY Support,Supported Read/Write DMA Queue,Not supported NOP Command,Supported Trusted Computing,Supported 64-bit World Wide ID,5002538E4963F38C Streaming,Not supported Media Card Pass Through,Not supported General Purpose Logging,Supported Error Logging,Supported CFA Feature Set,Not supported CFast Device,Not supported Long Physical Sectors (1),Not supported Long Logical Sectors,Not supported Write-Read-Verify,"Supported, Disabled" NV Cache Feature,Not supported NV Cache Power Mode,Not supported NV Cache Size,Not supported Free-fall Control,Not supported Free-fall Control Sensitivity,Not supported Service Interrupt,Not supported IDLE IMMEDIATE command with UNLOAD feature,Not supported Zoned Capabilities,Not supported SCT Command Transport,Supported SCT Error Recovery Control,Supported Nominal Media Rotation Rate,Non-rotating Media (SSD) Nominal Form Factor,2.5 inch SSD Features Data Set Management,Supported TRIM Command,Supported Deterministic Read After TRIM,Supported Read Zeroes After TRIM,Supported Operating System TRIM Function,"Supported, Disabled" Off-line Data Collection Status,Never Started Self Test Execution Status,Successfully Completed Total Time To Complete Off-line Data Collection,0 seconds Execute Off-line Immediate,Not supported Abort/restart Off-line By Host,Not supported Off-line Read Scanning,Not supported Short Self-test,Not supported Extended Self-test,Not supported Conveyance Self-test,Not supported Selective Self-Test,Not supported Save Data Before/After Power Saving Mode,Not supported Enable/Disable Attribute Autosave,Not supported Error Logging Capability,Not supported Security Mode Security Mode,Supported Security Erase,Supported Security Erase Time,4 minutes Security Enhanced Erase Feature,Supported Security Enhanced Erase Time,8 minutes Security Enabled,No Security Locked,No Security Frozen,No Security Counter Expired,No Security Level,High Device Encrypts All User Data,Yes Sanitize,Not supported Overwrite,Not supported Crypto Scramble,Not supported Block Erase,Not supported Sanitize Antifreeze Lock,Not supported ACS-3 Commands Allowed By Sanitize,No Serial ATA Features S-ATA Compliance,Yes S-ATA I Signaling Speed (1.5 Gps),Supported S-ATA II Signaling Speed (3 Gps),Supported S-ATA Gen3 Signaling Speed (6 Gps),Supported Receipt Of Power Management Requests From Host,Not supported PHY Event Counters,Supported Non-Zero Buffer Offsets In DMA Setup FIS,Not supported DMA Setup Auto-Activate Optimization,"Supported, Disabled" Device Initiating Interface Power Management,"Supported, Disabled" In-Order Data Delivery,Not supported Asynchronous Notification,"Supported, Enabled" Software Settings Preservation,"Supported, Enabled" Native Command Queuing (NCQ),Supported Queue Length,32 NCQ Streaming,Not supported NCQ Autosense,Not supported Automatic Partial to Slumber Translations,Not supported Rebuild Assist,Not supported Hybrid Information,Not supported Device Sleep (DevSleep),"Supported, Disabled" DevSleep to ReducedPwrState,Supported Disk Information Form Factor,"2.5""" Capacity,"500 GB (500 x 1,000,000,000 bytes)" Disk Interface,Serial-ATA/600 Device Type,Samsung 64-layer TLC V-NAND Width,69.8 mm (2.7 inch) Depth,100.0 mm (3.9 inch) Height,9.5 mm (0.4 inch) After nand reball https://i.imgur.com/7sqfxWG.png |
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| Author: | Zero Alpha [ January 29th, 2025, 20:30 ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Samsung Evo 860 500GB Died after wake from hibernate |
Oven baking is less popular these days. Air frying is the way to go! Check out Jamie Oliver's SSD recipes. |
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| Author: | Arch Stanton [ January 30th, 2025, 6:07 ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Samsung Evo 860 500GB Died after wake from hibernate |
Zero Alpha wrote: Oven baking is less popular these days. Air frying is the way to go! Check out Jamie Oliver's SSD recipes. |
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| Author: | skinbob [ January 30th, 2025, 10:17 ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Samsung Evo 860 500GB Died after wake from hibernate |
Zero Alpha wrote: Oven baking is less popular these days. Air frying is the way to go! Check out Jamie Oliver's SSD recipes. That's brilliant! |
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| Author: | hongducwb [ January 30th, 2025, 13:59 ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Samsung Evo 860 500GB Died after wake from hibernate |
Zero Alpha wrote: Oven baking is less popular these days. Air frying is the way to go! Check out Jamie Oliver's SSD recipes. thank cap, it worked |
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