Vulcan wrote:
Hi,
counting_crows wrote:
Few head failures. Most have bad sectors / weak sectors.
My suspicion is that the "bad/weak sectors" may be due to bad heads, especially when you said this...:
counting_crows wrote:
some with bazillions of weak sectors...
For such new drives, the super-paramagnetic effect ("demagnetization") would not be expected
But some of the drives healed (at least for now). After some read/writes, weak sectors disappeared (i am testing with multiple utilities under pure DOS). How can this be explained?
Quote:
- hence I was looking for other problems which can cause
apparent weak sectors, but without being a problem with the media itself. Unless you find the
real cause of some of these drive problems (e.g. change the head stack and see if the problems were due to head degradation of some kind) then everything else is a guess... We need
data (no pun intended

) about the real cause of the problem...
I am sorry, I can't be much of an assistance here Vulcan. I am an end user -- not a DR person. Changing the head stack and/or figuring out the real problem with the drive is beyond my capabilities.
Quote:
counting_crows wrote:
Vulcan, thank you for the link. Unfortunately it requires subscription, so i cant get it. If you have it, would you please be kind enough to post?
Oh! Sorry about that - I must be lucky to have access to that link

I will try to find a different public link... [Edit: Found one, see below]
Thank you very much. I will go through the link today.
Vulcan wrote:
Do you have a long-term humidity recorder, where the disk drives are, just to be sure?
Yes i do. And that is myself. I have allergies and sinusitis. I do have a HEPA air purifier in the house too (no ionization, etc). I don't think they are making those drives more sensitive to moisture and dust than a human with allergies is or none of them would work anywhere.
Quote:
counting_crows wrote:
My storage conditions are better than manufacturer specifications for my drives.
Unfortunately you cannot know that

Without a gas chromatograph to check for airborne chemical ions, it is impossible to rule-out something in your environment,
I am sorry, this is not making sense to me. We are not doing head-stack replacements in clean rooms. These are normal drives. And my living conditions are optimal since i am allergic to dust and have an air conditioning unit with multi filters plus and air purifier in my room. You can't expect everyone to run gas chromatographs to figure out if they can use their drives or not. If there was some problems with some chemicals, i would have been effected long before the magnetic media.
I think i found the problem! My drive are sensitive to nicotine! Now, it is metastasizing!
Quote:
One "common factor" with these disks is your storage environment, but as I said, that's just a guess, and no-one can confirm or deny that, without finding the true cause of the read failures with one of your "problem drives"...
Thank you very much for your input. I heartily agree with your approach (even though it might be beyond my own logic and reasoning). I will keep you updated if i can isolate something or if i can come up with solid data.
You are right. It is all talk now. Scientific approach is always preferable. I wish i could be more help.