First of all, I wanted to thank everyone on these forums for their posts and insights on all the various hard drive issues...and suggestions on how to diagnose the problem. Most of my google'ing and searching online brought me to several useful posts on here to help me figure out my problem. And I wanted to share my experience in the hopes that it may help someone else later on with a similar issue.
So I was in the process of building a new computer...and wanted to move my old hard drives over (which was just back-up storage)...but in the process of doing so, I quickly found out that I was no longer able to access one of the drives. A sunken feeling overcame me when I realized that this was most likely a hard drive failure since my other drives being transferred were fine. So I pulled out the drive in question for a closer look...It was a Western Digital SATA hard drive (WD6401AALS).
There was no spinning, no clicking...nothing...when I had the drive attached to power. After reading through the posts here, I learned that my next step should be to carefully take off the PCB board and have a look at the chips there. When I flipped over my hard drive PCB board, I noticed that one of the ICs, the Smooth Chip, had burnt marks on it (the IC chip on the upper right hand corner of the picture).
For my particular hard drive, I found the following:
PCB: 2060-701622-000 Rev P1
Smooth Chip: L7251 3.1
In general, what most people recommended, was to to get a new PCB board for your drive, and then do a BIOS firmware swap. However, I learned that one could not do a BIOS swap for this part. The PCB's BIOS is integrated on the Main Controller IC and so the Main Controller IC would have had to be swapped to a new PCB for the HDD to be recognized if I went that route.
I emailed and inquired at a few places online that fixed hard drives...and most were not that helpful, charged a high amount of money without any sort of guarantee, or were not clear when I said that there could not be a BIOS swap due to my particular model of hard drive.
However, the last place I emailed...
http://www.onepcbsolution.com/ actually fully understood my issue...and were able to answer all my questions to my satisfaction...and were patient with everything that I wanted to know more about. They also suggested that based on the picture I had sent...that the easiest fix may be to just replace the Smooth Chip...as the damage didn't look like it may have affected the rest of the PCB Board. On top of that, they said if they were unable to replace my Smooth Chip successfully, then they would refund the full cost for the service.
So I sent in my PCB board to oncepcbsolution.com. They were also very good with communication with every step of the way. They let me know when they had received my PCB Board, when they had finished working on my board, and once again when they mailed it back out to me. I got my board back this past weekend, and then reattached it to my hard drive...I held my breath as I attached the power to the drive...and then I heard it whirl up....I then tried to access my hard drive...and was able to see all my data! Needless to say, I was happy and relieved...and then spent several hours this weekend retrieving all my data from the drive...and was thankful that onepcbsolution.com was able to help me fix and solve my hard drive problem.
With information learned from this forum, and help from oncepcbsolution.com, I was fortunate and able to get my hard drive's PCB Smooth Chip replaced and then fully recover all my data.
Anyway, just wanted to post and share this with others on here. Thanks!
