BlackST wrote:
...assuming it is the pcb.
What he said, in a way.
It IS the PCB now, whether it always was, and there's nothing else wrong with your drive, we don't know. Check for a short across the motor windings using a digital (or late model dial) meter before you put a new PCB on it, so you don't just fry that one too in case the motor is shorted. A shorted motor could cause this to happen, though shorted motors are in practice generally a symptom of something else, not the cause of your trouble.
Remember, the TVS diode is a reverse current protection device, they don't usually burn for no reason. Especially burn badly enough to crack. Whatever caused this could also now have been "allowed" to get "onto" the rest of the board, frying the motor controller. The head preamplifier is also easily damaged, and may be damaged as well from whatever caused this. Unfortunately, the only way you will know that is to fix the drive to the point of the damage that you are thus far aware of, and look for additional problems.
The reason I say late model dial is that there are a lot of things (ICs, some other PCB components) that can be easily damaged by the high (1-6V!) resistance testing voltages used by some older meters. A digital meter or any auto ranging dial meter (or one that says it is safe for logic circuitry) will be fine for anything now, though in practice a digital is a lot easier to read unless you really like or got used to the old stuff.
All that being said, it's a motor and you won't hurt it with an old meter, just thought I would warn you in case you decided to go poking other things with your meter.
mjay wrote:
Sadly to say, there are no Seagate repair center nor pro people who can fix the PCB of my Hard drive. They are only distributors of Hard disks. If anyone has a spare board and will be available, I will appreciate it.
Details as specified on my Seagate Hard disk:
Model: ST3160215A
P/N: 9CY012-305
Firmware: 3.AAD
Date Code: 08045
Site Code: TK
Product of Thailand, as stated on the label
I wouldn't send it to Seagate's recovery company if I were paid to do it. I'd sooner send it to Ontrack (not an endorsement) and let them put it in a microwave or something, if I were to go to one of the big companies.
I actually did have a notebook brought to me once that a man whose wife had caught him carrying on with someone else had put it in a microwave when she caught him with emails on the machine. All information was recovered, though the drive was only circuit board damaged. The rest of the machine was a total loss.