Hi Griff,
if the data is important, don't even think about trying to open that drive without proper equipment. There are videos showing headswaps and there are videos showing how to free stuck heads (or better how not to ...). There are so many lost cases coming in from ppl that just watched youtube tutorials:
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=11912viewtopic.php?f=3&t=31150I just had a client that opened the drive of his gf, a lamp dropped on top of the drive. It does not turn any more. He opened it somewhere, turned the platter by hand, and checked all the screws to be tight. He even powered on the drive open. Platter-Alignment lost, platters damaged, heads dead => Lost case.
You need experience to do physical work, you need the equipment to do it safe. And after you have done a headswap you might be faced with the next problems: how about damaged firmware, bad sectors in SA, overall bad condition. How will you deal with these problems?
When the drive was dropped heads might be damaged, there might be platter scratches and so on. There is nothing you should do with the drive, even power on that drive is a risk on dropped drives, one should check heads first in a lab.
For the donor: What was identical? PN, Firmware, Serial-Number, Preamp?
Best regards,