Controller Board swapping a dead HDD - LFC

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 147

  • @CXensation
    @CXensation Год назад +27

    "If you don't look for lucky fixes you'll never find them." Sooo true ! 👍👍

    • @drayton359
      @drayton359 Год назад

      What like checking the bios date ???? lol never knew that could be a problem but glad you got it sorted in the end.

    • @CXensation
      @CXensation Год назад

      @@drayton359 Not valid in this instance, as it was clear the motor controller was bunt out.

  • @radio-ged4626
    @radio-ged4626 Год назад +1

    This cheered me up after a bad day in the workshop with multiple component failure on massively thick PCBs with tiny surface mount everything on it and through hole sub-PCBs - this happened 3 times in a row with different devices. None of which got fixed.😭😭😭😭😭😭Wah!!! indeed. Sore eyes and fingers and headache and bad mood.

  • @andrasszabo7386
    @andrasszabo7386 Год назад +1

    I once had 1 GB IBM laptop HDDs, where I could easily swap the boards without issues. IBM DMCA21080 and DMCA21440 was their model number. I was poor and I trashpicked these drives from laptop repair shops for about a dollar or two.

  • @MR308W
    @MR308W Год назад +18

    New shop, new intro and logo you’re doing well. Love your content, keep up the good work 😊
    Start regretting all the old stuff I threw away 6 years ago 😂

  • @vomytdaug
    @vomytdaug Год назад

    I’m not sure what I enjoy more , watching your repairs are hearing some of your fun English terms for dead pieces of hardware.

  • @NebukadV
    @NebukadV Год назад +3

    Two things, that could be pointed out:
    1) As others have already said, these controller boards can be bought on their own - usually very cheap (

  • @mikem3770
    @mikem3770 Год назад +2

    Thumbs up...researching my own data recovery of a family pic drive gone bad. I've sourced an "Identical" drive like you did. Fingers crossed. Thanks for your expertise in all thing tech related. disclaimers noted as well.

  • @marklucas8110
    @marklucas8110 Год назад +5

    Good save there Graham. Clear and concise, with no waffle with nothing to sell. Like the new titles/logo. Shop is looking good as well. Keep up great work.

  • @johncundiff7075
    @johncundiff7075 Год назад +1

    You are my computer repairman hero!! You give me the confidence to try more difficult repairs. Still I'm not good at soldering, but always learn something from your videos. Keep up the good work Sir!

  • @mikesunboxing
    @mikesunboxing Год назад +6

    Great stuff, admire your soldering skills

    • @lagpi
      @lagpi Год назад

      Fancy finding you here Mike!

    • @mikesunboxing
      @mikesunboxing Год назад

      @@lagpi Graham is the boss, I learn a lot from these videos

  • @truecauseofchaos
    @truecauseofchaos Год назад +1

    I swapped the boards of a failed IDE drive once 15-years ago and it worked fine, allowing me to copy my data off the drive. It failed a day later, but did let me grab my data so it was a success!
    You could restore the new board with the original ROM and put it back on the new drive, giving you a brand new one to use. As it hasn't even spun up, it should be fine to use.

  • @richardstillman8277
    @richardstillman8277 Год назад +22

    Graham, you are one of the most gifted techs on you tube. I don't understand why your subscriptions are as low as they are. When compared to someone like Cary Holzman who doesn't have a shadow of the talent as you do. He spends most of his time on begging for money than he does on computer repair. Rant over! Keep up with the great videos.

    • @ramireini
      @ramireini Год назад +2

      @Mr Guru This sounds very disrespectful and tells me more about you than it does about Holzman, chances are none of these people are gifted, they spend time with stuff and get results because of this, Graham isn't some demi-god that descended from the skies, he's just like us. Also keep in mind how much it helps other people to see Holzman build stuff, debug PC's etc.

    • @ramireini
      @ramireini Год назад +3

      @Mr Guru I understand, I just wanted to share my thoughts, calling people names will just make them not want to have a discussion, I've been on the internet long enough to see where this goes, I wish you the best.

    • @keiths8700
      @keiths8700 Год назад +2

      Graham is the best kept secret.

    • @nian60
      @nian60 Год назад

      @@ramireini FWIW, the OP is correct about Holzman. I watched Holzman for a while, before I knew any better.

    • @ramireini
      @ramireini Год назад

      @@nian60 That's not an argument, what changed? How was Holzman wrong and about what? Tell us the process, I want to know.

  • @stanpotter7764
    @stanpotter7764 Год назад

    I yelled "Yes!" when the data was there. 🤣 Hey, I'm a tech too. 🤜🏻🤛🏻

  • @GregM
    @GregM Год назад +2

    Wow an old Win2K/XP drive. Nice that you were able to get the exact controller board.

  • @user_23165
    @user_23165 Год назад

    My spidey sense is tingling ... "Bitcoin wallet" forgot inside, :-)

  • @cowantom
    @cowantom Год назад

    Good fix Graham. Really interesting

  • @fakecactusuk
    @fakecactusuk Год назад

    Great disclaimer at the start and a really enjoyable video - keep up the good work :-)

  • @colinreece3452
    @colinreece3452 Год назад

    Thanks Graham that was great. When you first started I said to myself just swop the board over why mess about with removing chips, then you answered and said it was that smaller chip that holds the way the drive has stored everything and just swapping the board won't work, it was like you heard me lol. I still have a couple of older drives that are not SATA connection, I keep meaning to look on them to see what is there, I have a drive dock with those connections on. Anyway Graham you did a good job and I'm sure the customer will be very happy, well done mate.

  • @johnhiggins9838
    @johnhiggins9838 Год назад

    Enjoyable watch, thanks.

  • @Ghost572
    @Ghost572 Год назад

    I actually recall your statement of "if components start getting blown around, then turn the air flow down". This was coming from someone who wasn't sure what the hell was going on when I first got my hotair station, the biggest suprise was how dam hot the PCB boards were getting, I was thinking this shit could fry an egg given the heat it gets to.
    I also think the distance from the board makes a difference, so you can decrease the airflow but put it closer and technically you should get the same effect, since if you take the air flow and the distance from the board as the frequency of how many hot air particles are traveling from the nozzle to the board then by decreasing the air flow and bringing the nozzle closer should keep the temperatures around the same.

  • @briangowero
    @briangowero Год назад

    Great content as usual. I still think that the background where u had various motherboards hung on the wall, was cool tech.

  • @MeitsMSX
    @MeitsMSX Год назад

    What fun :)
    I had the exact same chip (by smooth) going cactus yesterday and swapped it. That did the job.
    Those chips are more common that the chance of running into the exact same control board.
    Great to see you managed the fix :)

  • @chrisverhulst5476
    @chrisverhulst5476 Год назад

    I do like u a lot dude. You are so down to earth. I like this way like you are. If i would live in the UK, than i will come to your shop. But i am also a computer repair guy.

  • @patricksewell2010
    @patricksewell2010 Год назад +2

    I had even more luck with recovering data from the exact same drive! I had one with the same motor controller chip burnt to a crisp and I was able to take the exact donor board and hot swap it without even swapping the ROM chip and it worked like a charm! I was in disbelief myself, but it was a 100% successful recovery! I'm fact, I think the drive is ironically still being used to this day, not as a primary or a backup drive, but I believe it's a backup of a backup or something like that, lol!

    • @patricksewell2010
      @patricksewell2010 Год назад

      @@Aneesh.Asokan Dead serious! It worked 100%... It was for my pastor's PC... Wouldn't lie about that!!!

    • @patricksewell2010
      @patricksewell2010 Год назад

      @@Aneesh.Asokan lol... I totally agree, I was extremely surprised when it actually worked myself!

  • @sugargliderdude
    @sugargliderdude Год назад

    oh, i love videos like this, thanks for sharing

  • @baghdadiabdellatif1581
    @baghdadiabdellatif1581 Год назад

    Great work 👌
    I always wondered what data was in the hdd eeprom, and thanks to you, now I know it's the calibration data.

  • @emperorSbraz
    @emperorSbraz Год назад

    i never had to but something i read is:
    rather than swapping chips one can get a same model/make working donor drive WITH THE SAME GEOMETRY, boot it up, hotswap the board to the driver to recover.
    what's going to be missing is mainly the negative sector data which is the SMART reports and the reallocated sector map plus some other things BUT the platter will spin and heads move and data flow.

  • @fullscale4me
    @fullscale4me Год назад +1

    I did this 'back in the day' of MFM drives of whopping 10 Mb capacity. I had a X clone with two of them.

  • @Ed31003
    @Ed31003 Год назад

    great job Graham - also love the new logo very eye catching!!!!!

  • @--Zook--
    @--Zook-- Год назад +2

    data recovery is a very interesting thing for me. Finding content on it is kinda difficult as people want to protect their methods. I've found a couple channels, but the uploads are sporadic

  • @nian60
    @nian60 Год назад

    Yes thanks, this was very interesting. 💖

  • @dilanoclarke9163
    @dilanoclarke9163 Год назад

    This was informative thanks bro

  • @fu1r4
    @fu1r4 Год назад +1

    You can use Rufus to create a copy of the drive. You can then attach it as a VHD in the Disk management as a drive.

  • @geraldharkness8830
    @geraldharkness8830 Год назад

    this was excellent well done!

  • @arcamdomain
    @arcamdomain Год назад

    Use R studio for getting everything off the drive, and another brilliant piece of kit would be a pc3000 and a deepspar 4 DDI, I've used both when I was a data recovery technician

  • @yoyomismo2052
    @yoyomismo2052 Год назад

    For the HD dock I have one: tacens -portum duo II- usb3. 1
    And I recommend, is old but you can find new. Have 2 docks (only can read from the 1dock) but can clone hard drive alone (no matter the operating system or file system"in some cases you need to initialize the HD only don't need formatting ").only push a button a few seconds and strat cloning from dock1 to dock2 (always check or you erase the hard drive) .
    Suport HD3, 5/2, 5 and ssd (and iff buy adaptors for any ssd tipe to sata can do the same)

  • @Matlockization
    @Matlockization Год назад

    Those WD drivers are a sight to behold.

  • @luke27luis
    @luke27luis Год назад +1

    Oh, didn't know about that little ROM chip! Lots of years ago I replaced the whole board of a 320GB drive, and the drive performance absolutely went down, with ridiculously slow read speeds. I was able to recover the data though, so I still think the investment was worth it (the board alone was like 50% the value of a new drive). Now I know why it didn't work like expected. I guess I was lucky it worked at all!

    • @stephenxs8354
      @stephenxs8354 Год назад

      was it an ide drive or sata drive?

    • @luke27luis
      @luke27luis Год назад

      @@stephenxs8354 It was a 320GB sata Maxtor drive. Sata 1 I think!

  • @darrenraymond5334
    @darrenraymond5334 Год назад

    interesting work well done .

  • @pamelax64
    @pamelax64 Год назад

    You've learned me a big thing,replacing same board is useless until you replace this rom.

  • @train4905
    @train4905 Год назад

    I really enjoyed that bud😊

  • @paulh6395
    @paulh6395 Год назад +1

    I have a hard drive here which i am sure is the same.I brought a donor board to get the chip replaced but about 20 telephone calls to repair shops here in new zealand none can replace the chip so i never progressed further.

    • @gerydblackmore5484
      @gerydblackmore5484 Год назад

      Most shops will not carry out board repair especially on a spinning hdd. They just swap boards out..

  • @catcam
    @catcam Год назад

    Thanks for that !

  • @keiths8700
    @keiths8700 Год назад +1

    Yeah, I like your new intro too. I miss your old intro music a bit though.

  • @feeterican
    @feeterican Год назад

    2 tools that really don't cost much that would help out greatly. get a Hakko bottom heater and a Hakko vise (looks like a cylinder). It really makes it much easier to desolder ICs and even BGA.

  • @gaucovyaero
    @gaucovyaero Год назад +1

    How's been your experience with the pinecil? I'm looking forward to buying it.

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Год назад

      Yea I like the Pinecil a lot. My only complaint is that the rubber grip feels nice but has actually been slipping as of late, I need to put a little bit of double-sided tape under it.
      I've also been hearing a lot of good things about the Miniware TS101, but no idea what the cost/availability of it is like.

  • @procta2343
    @procta2343 Год назад

    cracking repair job that! would you do a video on how you got started at some point?

  • @mattdn8824
    @mattdn8824 Год назад

    Well done.

  • @saintuk70
    @saintuk70 Год назад +2

    That drive is, what, about 17+ years old? WD have always been solid for me. (and then we see a date later)

    • @ravneiv
      @ravneiv Год назад +2

      Now that I think of it I can't recall having a WD go bad. Sure I stopped using them after so many years, probably not more than 10, but also have had plenty of Seagate, Toshiba, Samsung, Hitachi, IBM drives die.

    • @christopherjackson2157
      @christopherjackson2157 Год назад +1

      It's astonishing they don't fail more often. Or cost 10x what they do. Aerospace grade mechanical engineering.

    • @saintuk70
      @saintuk70 Год назад

      @@ravneiv call it lack of luck, but every Seagate I've had, aside for a handful, have failed. I used to build around 30 pcs a year as a side hobby for people at work etc., had so many Seagate failures it just put me off. I know, 'cos I've done it recently, I can still hook up one of these WDs and they just work.

    • @ShinyHelmet
      @ShinyHelmet Год назад

      @@saintuk70 Seagte have historically been very poor for PC drives. Weirdly the AV ones in my TV recording boxes have lastest for years though!

  • @christopherjackson2157
    @christopherjackson2157 Год назад +3

    Data recovery is hard. Every timed ive succeeded its been more of a lucky strike than any real skill or ability on my part I fear :(
    And yes low airflow, high temp is the key to hot air. Only thing I use max airflow for is cooling down the air station
    Gj

    • @worldhello1234
      @worldhello1234 Год назад +1

      Yes, everybody knows only real Scotsman have real skillz and abilities. Everybody else doesn't eat haggis or sucks at life. 😂

  • @KrissBartlett
    @KrissBartlett Год назад

    thanks i have a drive like that but trouble getting the doner drive

  • @willbarger2233
    @willbarger2233 8 месяцев назад

    Nice work

  • @apolinarmartinez5723
    @apolinarmartinez5723 Год назад

    Great video

  • @bnottelm
    @bnottelm Год назад +1

    Now you have a working drive again - why not consider it as another backup drive instead of transforming it to electronic waste?

  • @abdulazimpatel8467
    @abdulazimpatel8467 Год назад

    Hey Graham what is the model number on that star tech usb star tech dock?
    Thank you for your videos especially the soldering and bios ones.

  • @DumahBrazorf
    @DumahBrazorf Год назад

    Sometimes could be just dirty/oxydized heads contacts and a scrub make the day. I revived a disk once with just a pencil eraser. The donor one looks quite nasty indeed.

  • @Sctronic209
    @Sctronic209 Год назад

    Awesome content

  • @tonymontana897
    @tonymontana897 Год назад

    I found the WD Caviar Green to be the worst drives. I've had several fail prematurely and have since avoided buying them. I have been using, Black, Red and Purple and all are still going strong after nearly 10 years of service.

  • @poppasteve2976
    @poppasteve2976 Год назад

    This guy is goooood!

  • @it-sd
    @it-sd Год назад

    How lucky! Board swaps are easy money.

  • @mspaint1011
    @mspaint1011 Год назад

    I have a problematic 8 tb drive that used to shut down randomly (until I used a right-angle data cable that doesn't press against the side panel). I noticed it has a slight crack in the material of the connector (close to where the pins are). Assuming that's the cause, hypothetically speaking would you be able to fix that?

  • @sgottoboni
    @sgottoboni Год назад

    Advice for everyone is to backup your data to prevent data loss.👍

  • @HCIbn
    @HCIbn Год назад

    I like the old intro music.

  • @QuentinStephens
    @QuentinStephens Год назад

    Great fix. Did you swap the configuration chips back afterwards? (Thus leaving yourself a working new drive.)

    • @QuentinStephens
      @QuentinStephens Год назад +1

      @Mr Guru Well yes, but switching the chip back should cover that.

    • @ShinyHelmet
      @ShinyHelmet Год назад +1

      That's exactly what I was thinking. Once the data was secure, resolder the 'new' chip back onto the 'new' board and put it back on the 'new' drive and the copy data across. It would seem a waste to have chucked that brand new donor drive in the bin.

    • @QuentinStephens
      @QuentinStephens Год назад +1

      @Mr Guru He didn't do it on the video; if he did I assume it was because it wasn't relevant to the fix. I was just interested. No biggie.

  • @andrewcosten
    @andrewcosten Год назад

    Great job

  • @minnesota-boston9620
    @minnesota-boston9620 Год назад

    You did a good job.

  • @pmatil1
    @pmatil1 Год назад

    Like the new intro graphic, but I prefer the old music.

  • @triplexdread
    @triplexdread Год назад

    Graham have you considered using a dual caddy? Lots of them have built in disk to disk offline cloning. No PC required

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Год назад +1

      I have one for M.2 drives, but for HDDs this little stardock has never let me down. USB bridges are not advised for data recovery, but I lucked out on mine, it seems to work very well.

    • @triplexdread
      @triplexdread Год назад

      @@Adamant_IT Ahh the Inateck one I have is very good. Never had issue. Even great for cloning over Xbox drives. I did my original 500GB to an SSD a while ago.. Dunno about PS drives though

  • @nickolaswilcox425
    @nickolaswilcox425 Год назад

    will this still work if the donor board has different chips? same pcb, same board number, the chips do the same things but are of different manufacturers, any issues with still doing the eeprom swap for such a case? the drive in question is an old ide drive that i am unable to determine which component is responsible for it being unresponsive, no obvious burn marks

  • @coladict
    @coladict Год назад

    I am all too familiar with the clicking of death on my mechanical hard drives. I still keep a dead one around as a paperweight. The fault in it is not electronic, though.

  • @deelkar
    @deelkar Год назад +1

    The reason you should use Linux is, that Windows cannot leave mounted drives alone and will write stuff, where Linux only reads, leading to less risk for additional damage.
    Not really relevant for this drive, but something to keep in mind.

    • @NebukadV
      @NebukadV Год назад

      There is a workaround, that will solve that problem at least in my cases it did: Remove the drive letter from all partitions on the drive. This can be done from windows disk management. If you are doing this sort of stuff on a regular basis, you can also disable windows from automatically assigning drive letters (cmd -> diskpart --> automount disable).
      In that state, windows will still give you hardware-access to the drive, so you will have sector-level access (for imaging or other recovery software), but windows will not mount the file system, so windows cannot interfere with the recover and the explorer won't freeze on read-errors.

  • @ALGADIXP
    @ALGADIXP Год назад

    thanks

  • @millzee60
    @millzee60 Год назад +1

    I had some 250GB WD drives in a RAID5 array. After about a year one of the disks failed so I sent it back to WD under warranty. While waiting for the replacement, a second drive in the array failed so of course that was the end of the data :( And the replacements WD sent me were not new but refurbished. I've never touched WD drives since. (I did manage to recover the data using the still good disk, one of the broken disks and a clever bit of software that understood RAID and rebuilt the files sector by sector)

    • @lm_dccxl4078
      @lm_dccxl4078 Год назад

      what brand do you use now?

    • @OPTIMUS6LTR
      @OPTIMUS6LTR Год назад

      unfortunate, i had a run with seagate 320gb drives dying and havent touched them again either . WD only now and have been lucky.... thats the most important part.. luck

    • @josephking6515
      @josephking6515 Год назад

      @@OPTIMUS6LTR Isn't it funny. I've had WD failures and have never had a Seagate fail on me. I worked in the corporate environment for a company that used Seagate SCSIs and WD IDEs. It worked for them and they had minimal failures. Go figure.

    • @millzee60
      @millzee60 Год назад

      @@lm_dccxl4078 Samsung, not had any issues with them.

    • @OPTIMUS6LTR
      @OPTIMUS6LTR Год назад

      @@josephking6515 i should clarify currently have 7x16tb HC550s which are actually Hitachi relabeled WD so that could explain it.. but have had luck with Red drives also, Blues never really touched Greens i had ok luck with.

  • @geezergeek1637
    @geezergeek1637 Год назад

    Greaat job.

  • @tricky.pixels
    @tricky.pixels Год назад

    I miss the old intro music...we are such creatures of habit....onwards & upwards!!!

    • @millzee60
      @millzee60 Год назад

      Nobody likes change :)

  • @bunnylove273
    @bunnylove273 Год назад

    hey bud well done

  • @BlitzProGaming1
    @BlitzProGaming1 Год назад

    quick question: If you don't care about the data on a drive that you want to swap boards on, do you still need to replace the rom chip?

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Год назад +1

      Yes, because the ROM chip data relates to the disk geometry as well. A loose analogy would be;
      Imagine you have a wall of filing cabinets labelled as columns and rows. Some of the draws are jammed and don't open, so you have a Custom label on them saying 'don't use this one'. Some of the draw labels are swapped around to put a specific label in an easier to reach location.
      Now imagine all the Custom labels are removed. The contents of the cabinets is all still there, but all that extra information about where some stuff is, what drawers are jammed, etc, is now lost, so the drive needs to build up all this info again - and some of it may be lost forever, which could result in permanently degraded performance.

  • @HalifaxComputersRepair
    @HalifaxComputersRepair Год назад +1

    where do get snapshot software?

  • @joseensenat8296
    @joseensenat8296 Год назад

    Excelente trabajo, desconocia Snapshot

  • @Nebbia_affaraccimiei
    @Nebbia_affaraccimiei Год назад

    wouldn't you wanna test the ebay drive beforehand?

  • @mrki412
    @mrki412 Год назад

    I've destroyed 2 WD HDD with new PSU, haven't changed cables and solution for fix was this.

  • @bornagain2641
    @bornagain2641 Год назад

    ADAM ANT IT

  • @chris_hertford
    @chris_hertford Год назад +1

    I've done HDD recovery with a straight board swap, maybe just lucky?

    • @chris_hertford
      @chris_hertford Год назад

      @MrTGuru if I remember rightly it was a Seagate 2TB 3.5" drive. Just plugged in the board from a donor.

  • @Mettalhorde
    @Mettalhorde Год назад

    why didnt u used donor board at hole just swap it out ? xD nstead swaping out chips

  • @jerichowall8185
    @jerichowall8185 Год назад

    I tried this once. With two exact same model drives. It did not go well.

  • @idklmaostilldontknow3592
    @idklmaostilldontknow3592 Год назад

    Can you make a video on how you made and run your repair shop? It seems really difficult for me yo imagine how id be able to run a profitable business lol

  • @technik-3dnerd
    @technik-3dnerd 10 месяцев назад

    nive work, pleas give me the Name from Snapshot Program for Windows, greetings

  • @notsogreat123
    @notsogreat123 Год назад

    The pad is a heatsink pad

  • @jordanlee2936
    @jordanlee2936 Год назад

    Do you do data recovery for samsung android devices?

  • @michaelluna6240
    @michaelluna6240 Год назад

    what model soldering pen is that?

  • @boojiela
    @boojiela Год назад

    are you a data recovery expert?

  • @pramodwick
    @pramodwick Год назад

    appreciate your effort on sharing knowledge but you moved the hot PCB what an expert never would do

  • @robertsandy3794
    @robertsandy3794 Год назад

    Get yourself a microscope and save your eyes. Also, what about an extractor fan to save your lungs.
    Good fix

  • @manino12345
    @manino12345 Год назад

    Brother how much do you charge for this?
    I have recently done a recovery by the same methods and charged £170 for labour. I recovered 350gb of family photos, Is that fair in the current market?

    • @Adamant_IT
      @Adamant_IT  Год назад +1

      It seems to vary by country a lot. Data recovery in the UK is very expensive. If you send the drive to a lab and they need to rebuild it (take apart the mechanics, etc) I would expect a bill of £700-£1400.
      I don't charge anywhere near this amount, because my data recovery methods are for easier jobs like this - I don't have the skill or equipment to rebuild a HDD.

  • @RVail623
    @RVail623 Год назад

    Why not first: try swapping in ONLY the donor circuit board? Then if the drive can't be read, go on to swapping the soldered chips. Thus potentially saving some time, if a circuit board swap alone would suffice.

    • @geraldh.8047
      @geraldh.8047 Год назад

      Watch the video, it’s clearly stated at 3:54

    • @cjmillsnun
      @cjmillsnun Год назад

      That rom contains things like the bad sector list (all hard drives have some bad sectors). Much better to have the one that matches the drive.

    • @RVail623
      @RVail623 Год назад

      @@cjmillsnun All I'm saying is: first see if it works, without the extra effort of de-soldering/soldering. Maybe the rom is capable of re-learning when applied to the new spinning drive. There should be very little chance of doing any kind of data damage while in read-only mode, and could have saved some repair effort.

    • @GregM
      @GregM Год назад +2

      @@RVail623 To truly put a drove in read only mode you need equipment used for forensic recovery when prohibits any writing to the drive at all.

    • @brainimplants
      @brainimplants Год назад

      I have similarly swapped hdd boards without messing with the eeprom just fine and that's the safest way. But if you must, first get a $10 eeprom reader and back up both. Also, if you learn how to interpret wd model numbers you can match more compatible donor boards.

  • @dikoman516
    @dikoman516 Год назад

    Do the soldering under the microscope so we can see.

  • @neilw392
    @neilw392 Год назад

    Didn't want to take the like count off of 69. But I had too lol

  • @hans429
    @hans429 Год назад

    So if ya harddrive is broken, it dont work no more? WOW! Honestly i learn new shit everyday🤣🤣🤣

  • @aMartianSpy
    @aMartianSpy Год назад

    WD kaput
    ;)

  • @gerydblackmore5484
    @gerydblackmore5484 Год назад

    Every hdd will die, that's why you make bk ups. It does not matter if its wd or segate, they all fail. My bk ups folks. X