vulcan wrote:
As hddguy says, why would two totally different faults occur on the same drive? Either they occurred at the same time (but how is the scratch being explained exactly?) or one of the faults was not bad enough to affect drive operation (and hence does not need to be repaired!). Personally, I'm sceptical here...
hddguy wrote:
Also in my opinion it is un-likely that HDD can cause scratch with PCB failing to power. Unless was caused prior to PCB damage, which means HDD was mechanically failed before it failed electrically.
That exactly was my own opinion when reported the failure - which is a logical thought.
The DR technician though assured me that a sudden power failure can
definitely cause scratches due to "incorrect" orders sent to heads.
HDD was ok as far as I know (haven't made a surface test recently - also I don't know if scratches can be verified except by visual inspection - of course a large number of bad sectors could indicate sth like that).
Also, I am assured that the disk is being opened and checked visually. I do not have
yet details about the scratch. In fact I was told that
"it appears to have a minor scratch". That could mean that there was no scratch at all?! I do not know yet for sure.
hddguy wrote:
You have had your data back yet?
I didn't get the data yet, but a list of all retrievable files - I couldn't find any file missing in a non-thorough check.
In addition, the total size of retrievable files is about 150GB in a total of 320GB (HDD was not full - can't remember exactly how much full, but as far as I can recall, it was about so much). I could be lucky!?
vulcan wrote:
I'm not making judgements on whichever company is involved, but less-than-reputable companies could say that they had to do mechanical / cleanroom work, to justify an increased cost / delay / only partial recovery / etc., when in fact only PCB repair / replacement was needed.
???!