Hi, I don't know whether anyone will be able to help but here goes.
In about February 2009 my friend bought a cheapish Packard Bell which we later discovered had this drive in it. It worked perfectly until a few week ago. That day, she turned it on, and it booted up normally and got to the "choose user" page. Then, it started making a strange, high-pitched squealing/whining sound. This wasn't any kind of error message beep sequence - more like the kind of noise that makes you think "uh-oh". However (I was there) I don't remember hearing any "click of death" either. Then the computer suddenly stopped communicating with the screen, which went black apart from the message "no signal being received".
Her boyfriend thought it was a burnt out video card, having had something similar happen to him, and we used a spare screen to test it wasn't a fault with the screen itself. Since it was out of warranty, she hoped to just take out the hard drive and access the information using an adapter. However it is completely dead, not responding at all. We tried the freezer trick, which did not work.
However, I just noticed today that one very small black chip, (no more than 0.4 cm long) on the PCB is burnt out.
Attachment:
Hard drive PCB.jpg [ 253.27 KiB | Viewed 6534 times ]
She is normally really careful about backing up data, but there is about two weeks of stuff that I know she is really really hoping to be able to get back. I have heard of swapping circuit boards with identical drives to bring them back to life, and was just wondering if anyone thinks this might be any use here?
All advice that anyone can offer is appreciated, thanks in advance for any help!
This is the drive:
Attachment:
Back of broken hardrive.JPG [ 1.38 MiB | Viewed 6534 times ]