Firmware what is it?

March 19th, 2009

Firmware what is it?

Lets take a look at the PCB there are often several chips on a PCB but what do they do? Do they contain the firmware or is that resident on the hard drive? The IC chips on the logic card are nothing more than empty chips, they have to be programmed to deliver their functions and complete the circuit. Originally all hard drives stored firmware in the ROM, unfortunately this limited the code and functions of the hard drive. Currently the firmware is stored in the SA Service Area of the hard drive known to the manufacturer as a reserved area. The firmware is organized into modules and controlled by the manufacturers own operating system. The ROM chip nowadays contains minimal amount of code, some companies now have nothing more than the loader on the ROM chip.

Problems and Diagnostics of Seagate Drives

March 18th, 2009

Common Problems and Diagnostics of Seagate data recovery.

U Series 5
Typical problems with this drive family are diode failures which affect the voice coil and spindle, and failure of the read/write channel.

Barracuda ATA II
This family tends to suffer from problems with the stabilizers of the spindle motor circuit either by burning or shorting out. The latching transistors of the read/write channel circuitry, the symptoms of which are the drive produces knocking at a frequency of 5Hz.

SP1654N Dead Drive

March 18th, 2009

I got a Samsung SP1654N IDE drive in today which at first glance looks like any other IDE hard drive. The biggest head scratch is that when slaved into a secondary system, the system powers up normally, all looks good. On closer inspection of our slaved drive reveals that the disk is not spinning, not even a brrrrr or click. Someone call a external drive data recovery specialist!

The drive came from a external hard drive casing. This was tested and we found it to be faulty as well. We can say that the drive suffered from a intense power spike. This spike has caused damage to the external hard drive casing, the PCB of the hard drive and also the spindle motor of the hard disk drive.

Data Recovery Climates

March 12th, 2009

Geographic Based Data Recovery

There are many differences around the world in the data recovery field, they vary from manufacturer, distribution, problems and solutions.

As hard drives are manufactured the manufacturers need licenses to distribute and ship them overseas. Some countries may be ignored if there is no requirement for those models, if problems occur in those countries or maybe the cost of export is too high to make a good profit. As we travel around the world we will find that some countries do not have certain brands of hard drives (this is usually the case for many products not technology related too). In the UK the trade of hard drives is quite an open market we receive hard drives from all over the world, however in India they do not see many Hitachi drives. The exact reason for this is unknown, maybe they are out there but not many fail and arrive in the lab for recovery.

Some tips to Protect your data.

December 23rd, 2008

“The prevention is always better than the cure”. Some important tips have been listed here to protect your data. By following these steps, we can avoid the loss of data and a difficult data recovery procedure.

Make Backups regularly!

Backing up the boot sectors and other directory information is always a wise procedure for securing your data. The different areas on your disk should be backed up on different intervals. A complete backup program consists of the following measures:

Servo Area Corruption Western Digital

October 21st, 2008

Western Digital P-List corruption causing drive failure

Background: Failures on WD hard disks can sometimes be attributed to a corruption of service data located in the firmware zone of the hard disk. This corruption often involves a table commonly known as the P-List and in many cases, it is impossible to read the original contents of the P-List once the drive has failed.

Spindle Operation

May 23rd, 2008

Spindle Motor Operation

It will not surprise you, given the precision involved in every facet of the construction of the hard disk drive, that the spindle motor has several important demands placed upon it. First, the motor must be of high quality, so it can run for thousands of hours, and tolerate thousands of start and stop cycles, without failing. Second, it must be run smoothly and with a minimum of vibration, due to the tight tolerances of the platters and heads inside the drive. Third, it must not generate excessive amounts of heat or noise. Fourth, it should not draw too much power. And finally, it must have its speed managed so that it turns at the proper speed. All of this just to avoid the need for hard drive data recovery!

Hard Drive Spindle Motor

May 23rd, 2008

Hard Disk Spindle Motor

The spindle motor, also sometimes called the spindle shaft, is responsible for turning the hard disk platters, allowing the hard drive to operate. The spindle motor is sort of a “work horse” of the hard disk. It’s not flashy, but it must provide stable, reliable and consistent turning power for thousands of hours of often continuous use, to allow the hard disk to function properly. In fact, many drive failures which result in the need for hard drive data recovery, are actually failures with the spindle motor, not the data storage systems.

spindle

Understanding RAID data recovery

March 19th, 2008

RAID data recovery is, of course, the act of recovering data from a RAID system. For those of you in the dark about what a RAID system is, I hope to shed a bit of light on the subject in this brief outline. I will also point you to a few sources for RAID data recovery that can help your issues with ease and recover your lost data in no time and with very little cost. All of this, of course, can be done at your greatest convenience but I’m willing to be that data recovery is no matter of convenience.

RAID Data Recovery for Those Who Have Crashed, Burned… and Learned

March 19th, 2008

If you want to know about RAID data recovery, it means either one of two things. You’ve maybe crashed your hard drive – or are afraid it may soon crash – and are looking into storing data using RAID’s scheme (redundant arrays of inexpensive disks, “independent” sometimes used in place of “inexpensive”).

It could also mean that you’re trying to recover files from a damaged RAID. Since the RAID system uses multiple hard disks, you can suffer either partial or whole failure.

You’d think that your database would be safe after you’ve protected it with a RAID backup. But statistics show that of total data loss in any system, approximately 44% comes from hardware failure.

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