October 21st, 2010, 12:59
October 21st, 2010, 19:42
October 21st, 2010, 21:03
October 23rd, 2010, 7:08
October 23rd, 2010, 16:45
October 24th, 2010, 11:34
fzabkar wrote:Your board has sustained an overvoltage on the +5V supply. The part on the lefthand edge of the PCB is the 5V TVS diode. You can snip it out with flush cutters.
The part near the SATA power connector is an inductor (or low ohm resistor ?). You can clean up the area with a toothbrush and isopropyl alcohol (tape head cleaner). Then replace the inductor with a wire link.
If there are no other problems, then the board should work perfectly well. However, be absolutely certain that your power supply is OK, as you will no longer have overvoltage protection on the 5V supply. For continued protection, you can replace the diode with an SMAJ5.0A from Farnell, Mouser, Digikey.
If you need to replace the board, then you will need to transplant the 8-pin serial EEPROM chip from patient to donor. This chip stores unique, drive specific calibration data. It is located in the top LH corner of the board.
If you need to purchase a PCB, try the following vendor:
http://www.onepcbsolution.com/
His price is US$40, plus $10 for a ROM transfer.
Alternatively, try http://www.hdd-parts.com/firmware-transfer.html
These URLs should help you identify the components:
http://hddscan.com/doc/HDD_from_inside.html
http://www.users.on.net/~fzabkar/HDD/HDD_ICs.txt
http://www.users.on.net/~fzabkar/HDD/TVS_diodes.txt
October 24th, 2010, 20:43
anudeep wrote:fzabkar wrote:Your board has sustained an overvoltage on the +5V supply. The part on the lefthand edge of the PCB is the 5V TVS diode. You can snip it out with flush cutters.
The part near the SATA power connector is an inductor (or low ohm resistor ?). You can clean up the area with a toothbrush and isopropyl alcohol (tape head cleaner). Then replace the inductor with a wire link.
If there are no other problems, then the board should work perfectly well. However, be absolutely certain that your power supply is OK, as you will no longer have overvoltage protection on the 5V supply. For continued protection, you can replace the diode with an SMAJ5.0A from Farnell, Mouser, Digikey.
If you need to replace the board, then you will need to transplant the 8-pin serial EEPROM chip from patient to donor. This chip stores unique, drive specific calibration data. It is located in the top LH corner of the board.
If you need to purchase a PCB, try the following vendor:
http://www.onepcbsolution.com/
His price is US$40, plus $10 for a ROM transfer.
Alternatively, try http://www.hdd-parts.com/firmware-transfer.html
These URLs should help you identify the components:
http://hddscan.com/doc/HDD_from_inside.html
http://www.users.on.net/~fzabkar/HDD/HDD_ICs.txt
http://www.users.on.net/~fzabkar/HDD/TVS_diodes.txt
i did as you said but then came another problem the drive gets detected some times and disappears some time and when it appears it shows just about 7GB or something that too in recovery software
i think now there is a problem with the head is it like that ????
October 27th, 2010, 14:14
October 27th, 2010, 22:09
anudeep wrote:i have done as you said but there is another problem now you can check whether i have done that correctly
Now the hard drive spin for few second and stops and also makes some tick tick sound you can hear that in hdd.rar file
so can you tell me is it head or should i try with the PCB only
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