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Hi there,
I work at a small mom-and-pop computer store. Yes, I'm one of those dangerous amateurs you're always talking about. Yesterday my boss plugged in an IDE laptop drive into one of our bench systems for a routine data transfer. It immediately caught on fire. No one can figure out what he did wrong, but I'm guessing he plugged the connector in upside down or one pin off, sending 5v over one of the data lines.
Luckily we found a very similar drive in our dead pile... The burned drive was a Seagate Momentus 4200.2 (ST9100822A), and the donor drive was a Seagate Momentus 5400.2 (ST9100823A)... One model off, but they have identical PCB's, even the same firmware revision. I figured what the hell, and I swapped the PCB's. Originally it wouldn't spin up or be detected by the BIOS, so I inspected the PCB, found a chip that looked like a SPI EEPROM (SST 25P05AVG), desoldered it off the dead drive, and transplanted it onto the working one. Now the drive is correctly recognized by the BIOS, looking good, can see the correct partition information in windows, and all the data looks to be there. At this point I was feeling pretty good about myself, but my celebrations were premature... Any time I tried to clone the data with norton ghost, it would hang at "checking NTFS partition", and any time I tried to clone with acronis trueimage it would get half way through then say "failed to read from sector 1". I tried a byte-for-byte copy with linux's dd command, but it would get 10gb in then stop for no reason.
Now, I've managed to get almost all the important data off, but the drive is still incredibly flaky. About one in 10 times it's not detected by the BIOS on startup, and if you run it for a few hours eventually it'll spin down and become inaccessible.. I'm not really looking for any advice, I know I'll be told to send it to a professional, but more than anything I'm just sort of curious why it would behave like this... I figured the platters should have been unaffected, so either the pcb swap works 100% or it doesn't work at all. The customer isn't concerned about reusing the drive, he was going to retire this laptop anyway, and as long as we haven't lost his outlook pst file he's happy, but in the future I wish I knew what could cause this sort of flaky behavior.
Thanks for any replies!
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