macdady808
Is correct! you are dealing with componants thea are moving at speed MICRONS apart, definately not a DIY job :0(
stick to standard diagnostics
Hard Drive Diagnostics
*****Vendor Specific Support/Diagnostics*****
Maxtor/Quantum (Fireball) http://www.maxtor.com/en/s
Western Digital http://support.wdc.com/dow
Samsung http://www.samsungelectron
Seagate http://www.seagate.com/sup
IBM/Hitachi http://www.hgst.com/hdd/su
fujitsu/Seimens http://www.fcpa.fujitsu.co
If you do not know the drive manifacturer try some generic drive testers
*****FREE*****
ZDU http://www.webattack.com/g
Zdu is a diagnostic utility for disks & directories. It comes as a GUI version as well as a commandline only version (both included).
AIDA http://www.webattack.com/g
An easy to use report wizard allows you to create detailed reports in the format of your choice
*****TRIALWARE*****
DiskChecker http://www.webattack.com/g
Disk Checker is a disk diagnostics, repair and disk image tool for FAT and NTFS.
Drive Health http://www.webattack.com/g
Drive Health helps you to estimate your hard disks life resource. It allows you to predict possible hard drive failure
Main Topics
Browse All Topics





by: macdady808Posted on 2003-09-04 at 21:36:46ID: 9293458
Repairing physical aspects of a hard drive is better left to the pros. First off you will need to do it in a clean room, as dust in the air will ruin the platters. Also I’m not sure how you mean repair, but you’ll never be able to find… say a hard drive motor, or a new drive head. And if you did, it would be more expensive to get those working than to buy a new hard drive. This is why there are companies that charge big bucks to recover data from fried hard drives, because the equipment required before you can even safely open the casing is so expensive.
Bottom line. Can’t do it