Digital Don wrote:
HDD Spaz, you didn't even know where the rom chip was located on the PCB so close your mouth!
This method is not guaranteed, but I believe the info on the platters is only checked agains't the rom chip on boot up, sure the ECC table will be incorrect, but this can be reset quite easily with software, and you will not need to reset that if you are able to grab all of your files.
The guy at myharddrivedied.com is an industry expert, and it does say 25% success rate.
I'm not trying to be a Guru, just trying to help!
So what do you suggest if the rom is fucked??? Mr "No It All"
You clearly have no knowledge of the subject. This is clear in your post. Posts like that cause people to lose data. I have never seen corrupt rom on a seagate, or Seagate rom which is not readable via pcb or external reader in 7 years of data recovery. What I have seen is people attempting DIY data recovery who manage to lose the ROM.
I think you are speaking of hot swap. Won't work for this drive. Maybe you should have read about data shifts etc before posting.
Industry expert my arse. If he is such an industry expert how come he is recommending SD plattor swap tool which doesn't even work on the most common drives with seized motors.
This guy is only famous because he decided to leak some 'secrets', secrets which were not discovered by him, might have been because his own data recovery business was failing.