Possible to fix a harddrive yourself?
Possible to fix a harddrive yourself?
So I've bene sitting here staring at a 250gb sata drive. A Western Digital Caviar SE. It spins or something I can feel it when the computer starts up, but it won't register in the bios, or continue to spin. I've tired both legacy and sata power connectors to it. I've tried multiple ports. now I want to see if there is anything else I can do to it. tapping it while it's plugged in does nothing either. Just curious as this is a nice hd and I hate to see it not working.

- DaIceMan
- Legit Extremist
- Posts: 1599
- Joined: Tue Jul 18, 2006 10:31 pm
- Location: Springfield-ish, Missouri
I have a clients' machine, hard drive failed taking all the information along with it. I was talking to a buddy and he said that to get it to spin, if only for a few minutes, to plug it in (power and data), hit the power button and smack the side of it VERY hard. He said that sometimes the platters or needle (probably the wrong term, too early to think) would stick and it took a great deal of G Force to start them moving again.
I've also heard that freezing the drive for a few hours will sometimes allow it to work for just a little bit and let you get data off of it.
As for a hard drive that just stopped working, even if I could get it working again, I would be leary of using it for anything important due to increased failure risk. Follow up on the warranty issue (you should be able to check status of the warranty online). If you don't have a warranty, I'd said time to head it to the dumpster.
I've also heard that freezing the drive for a few hours will sometimes allow it to work for just a little bit and let you get data off of it.
As for a hard drive that just stopped working, even if I could get it working again, I would be leary of using it for anything important due to increased failure risk. Follow up on the warranty issue (you should be able to check status of the warranty online). If you don't have a warranty, I'd said time to head it to the dumpster.
Gamer - Thermaltake Element S | PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Black | Gigabyte GA-EP45-DS3L | Intel E8400 | Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro | 4GB OCZ Reaper Ram | XFX 8800GTX | Creative X-Fi XtremeGamer | Seagate 7200.10 320GB
HTPC / Folder - Palit 9600GT 1GB Sonic | AMD Phenom 9600 | Corsair DHX 4GB | ECS GF8200A | OCZ StealthXStream 500
Thanks to Palit, AMD, Corsair and ECS for sponsoring the 2008 Folding Give-away!

HTPC / Folder - Palit 9600GT 1GB Sonic | AMD Phenom 9600 | Corsair DHX 4GB | ECS GF8200A | OCZ StealthXStream 500
Thanks to Palit, AMD, Corsair and ECS for sponsoring the 2008 Folding Give-away!
- Dragon_Cooler
- Legit Extremist
- Posts: 2405
- Joined: Wed Oct 12, 2005 10:17 am
- Location: DFW Texas
- Contact:
I second the warranty question, depending on which version of the drive you have, it might still be covered.
http://support.wdc.com/warranty/policy.asp#policy
otherwise it has some cool magnets in it

http://support.wdc.com/warranty/policy.asp#policy
otherwise it has some cool magnets in it

Phenom II 1075T,Phenom II 1090T,Intel i7 870
Gigabyte 890XA-UD3
Evga GTX460
8 GB Corsair
Agility2 120GB SSD
Dual 24" Samsungs LCD's
Gigabyte 890XA-UD3
Evga GTX460
8 GB Corsair
Agility2 120GB SSD
Dual 24" Samsungs LCD's
- Tech_Greek
- Legit Extremist
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 2:35 pm
If it's not recognizing in BIOS then you need to find a HD with the exact same model number and swap the logic board over on the bottom of the HD because that's usually the case.
If it were just sitting there clicking, usually a bad arm, just replace it with again, same model.
As far as dust proof room, meh, I just hold my breathe so I don't blow on the platter and have yet to have a problem in three years.
If it were just sitting there clicking, usually a bad arm, just replace it with again, same model.
As far as dust proof room, meh, I just hold my breathe so I don't blow on the platter and have yet to have a problem in three years.
I've had the same problem with my older hard drive. You cannot fix hard drives without a clean room environment, meaning that there is almost no dust in the air, because a dust particle can lodge between the hard disk platter and the head, causing the drive to scratched, and therefore ruined. The problem you are facing is the sign of an ailing or bad drive in my experience. I suggest that you get a new drive. They are now pretty cheap.

this might be a little simple, but if you havn't used it for while, you should check the jumpers, if you have more than one drive set as master, it will only see one(i had that problem with two optical drives)
-Austin

Screamin' BCLK:
775 System (Overclocking Platform): Q8400/Q8300/E8400/E7400/E7500 - GA-EP45-UD3R v1.1 - 4GB (2x2) OCZ Reaper HPC DDR2 1066 CL5 2.1v Corsair TX-750w
Gamer: Asrock Z77 Extreme4, i7 3770K @4.6GHz, ThermalTake Armor A90 modded, 2x4GB GSKILL RipjawsX DDR3 2133 CL9, Corsair HX-750w, MSI GTX660 Twin Frozr
Server2012: Q9300 - 8GB DDR2 - Asus P5QL Pro - Corsair CX430 - Mirrored 2TB Seagate's with 2TB WD cav for fileshare backups, 1TB WD for OS backups

Screamin' BCLK:

775 System (Overclocking Platform): Q8400/Q8300/E8400/E7400/E7500 - GA-EP45-UD3R v1.1 - 4GB (2x2) OCZ Reaper HPC DDR2 1066 CL5 2.1v Corsair TX-750w
Gamer: Asrock Z77 Extreme4, i7 3770K @4.6GHz, ThermalTake Armor A90 modded, 2x4GB GSKILL RipjawsX DDR3 2133 CL9, Corsair HX-750w, MSI GTX660 Twin Frozr
Server2012: Q9300 - 8GB DDR2 - Asus P5QL Pro - Corsair CX430 - Mirrored 2TB Seagate's with 2TB WD cav for fileshare backups, 1TB WD for OS backups
- Tech_Greek
- Legit Extremist
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 2:35 pm
tekgek wrote:I've had the same problem with my older hard drive. You cannot fix hard drives without a clean room environment, meaning that there is almost no dust in the air, because a dust particle can lodge between the hard disk platter and the head, causing the drive to scratched, and therefore ruined. The problem you are facing is the sign of an ailing or bad drive in my experience. I suggest that you get a new
drive. They are now pretty cheap.
Trying to steal my name huh?

as far as the dust proof room, if you're THAT concerned, go into the shower and turn on the shower and steam the room, turn the shower off and go into there after you can see and there you go! dust is suspended almost because of the moisture.
Re: Possible to fix a harddrive yourself?
I junked the old drive, but thanks, I'll keep that that in mind.
and no, I'm not trying to steal your name. I use for all my online stuff. I thought of it a couple of years ago.


- Tech_Greek
- Legit Extremist
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 2:35 pm
Re: Possible to fix a harddrive yourself?
Hah, what are the chances of someone thinking the same thing at the same time?tekgek wrote:I junked the old drive, but thanks, I'll keep that that in mind.and no, I'm not trying to steal your name. I use for all my online stuff. I thought of it a couple of years ago.
Re: Possible to fix a harddrive yourself?
My gaming rig:
Intel CoreDuo 2.14Ghz, MSI Mobo, 2GB DDR2-800 Corsair XMS, RaptorX 150 & Raptor 74GB, Creative X-Fi Fatality
XFX 8800GTX 768MB, Thermaltake Armour Case, Thermaltake 750W PSU, Twin Sony 16X DVD-RW+/-, Logitech G7, Saitek Keyboard, Samsung 2ms 22" WS LCD.
Intel CoreDuo 2.14Ghz, MSI Mobo, 2GB DDR2-800 Corsair XMS, RaptorX 150 & Raptor 74GB, Creative X-Fi Fatality
XFX 8800GTX 768MB, Thermaltake Armour Case, Thermaltake 750W PSU, Twin Sony 16X DVD-RW+/-, Logitech G7, Saitek Keyboard, Samsung 2ms 22" WS LCD.