April 4th, 2016, 9:02
68G (not sure if the last character is a G or the symbol of a brand)
01A
MApril 4th, 2016, 9:21
April 4th, 2016, 10:41
April 4th, 2016, 11:36
SOSdonnees wrote:Hi,
Every year, I see several PCB with burnt TVS diodes as wrong voltage (often 19V) was plugged into 12V external enclosures.
Instead of sacrificing every time a healthy hard drive or PCB, I would like to purchase a small set of TVS diodes, new ones, or refurbished and tested ones. (~ 5 to 10 units). Mainly for Western Digital and Seagate.
Does anyone have such diodes to sell, which could be sent for cheap in a reinforced enveloppe?
Or if I purchase new diodes from an electronic distributor, are there some polyvalent diode models fitting most Western Digital drives and/or most Seagate drives?
I'm currently looking for what seem to be the D4 diode of a WD Green 1TB WD10EARS with 701640-002 PCB.
The component is it is not numbered on the PCB, but seem being the D4 after comparison with similar circuit boards.
On the diode is written:Other D4 diodes from close drive models should be OK too.
- Code:
68G (not sure if the last character is a G or the symbol of a brand)
01A
M
Thank you.
April 4th, 2016, 12:00
SOSdonnees wrote:Instead of sacrificing every time a healthy hard drive or PCB
April 4th, 2016, 12:13
data-medics wrote:SOSdonnees wrote:Instead of sacrificing every time a healthy hard drive or PCB
I think the problem is you're just "fixing" the drives, not actually "recovering" them. What we do here is we just have our own PCBs which we use to recover the data onto another drive, then put the old burnt one back on the drive when we return it to the customer. That way we keep the good PCB and it's ready for the next case. I have some PCBs here that have probably done 50 cases already.
April 4th, 2016, 12:25
April 5th, 2016, 6:18
... or getting their original drive repaired, making data available again and faster, without the extra cost of a new drive and copying everything.Customers would prefer to get their data PLUS their original drive repaired.
This is what I usually do, although I don't have thousands myself, and more Seagate's than WD's ones.I can't speak for others, but I'd just grab one off of one of the thousands non-functional parts drives we have sitting around here when I need it.
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