in unbricking the drive yourself
Some people offer their help here, maybe there's someone in your neighbourhood
that is willing to help (for something like a bottle of wine perhaps)
Just tell where you're from; maybe we can work something out?
The drive first needs to be unbricked before anything can be salvaged from it;
in fact the drive isn't even really defective, its just the firmware (that's
the software inside the drive) that's hanging, similar to a program on your PC
that's freezing, which is why the drive isn't recognized by your PC anymore.
If you do know someone with a little knowlegde of electronics, it can indeed
be done with a (modified) interface like the Nokia CA-42 USB cable, so see your
friends and relatives and ask around, maybe you're lucky
List of things you'll need:
- A friend or relative with at least a bit of DIY knowledge (preferably in electronics)
- A computer with HyperTerminal (or similar)
- A serial interface that outputs TTL levels (like a CA-42 USB cable)
- A pair of cutting pliers and a way to connect the cut wires to the drive.
(See some of the hints in this topic; even sticky tape *could* work, but is not recommended) - A SATA-power supply (can be taken from the "un-brick computer")
- The first page of this thread

After that it's just:
- Modifying the CA-42 interface (cut off the connector that originally
went to the mobile phone)
- Connecting the interface to your PC and installing the drivers
- Insulating the drive's PCB from the drive's contacts
- Connecting the interface to the diagnostics port of the drive
- Applying power to the drive's PCB
- Creating a terminal connection with HyperTerminal
- Following the first instructions (press CTRL+Z, spin down the drive)
- Removing insulation that separated the PCB from the drive's contacts
- Following the rest of the instructions (spin drive up again and follow
further directions). - Removing power supply from drive
- Re-attaching the drive to the PC in the normal way
- Starting PC and see if the drive is recognized again
If all went well you should:
- Backup the (most important) files on the drive
- Download, burn to CD and run SeaTools for DOS (reboot from burned CD)
- Test drive with a short and long DST-test (it most likely will give
you some error code) - Create an RMA at Seagate to have the drive swapped using the reported errorcode
Greetz and good luck,
Peter.



Help


Back to top












