That is right..
But as said before, your problem is not on the PCB. You need a tool to diagnose what else is wrong with the drive....
What you were seeing was just the PCB returning a default kernel ID when it gives up.
I mean, it's technically "possible" you'd just need to know all the vendor-specific ATA commands. Problem is, no one who's done all that reverse engineering is going to share that information. Which is why they lock it down in a hardware/software combo tool like PC-3000 and you have to pay into funding their work.on WD it's not possible
I mean, it's technically "possible" you'd just need to know all the vendor-specific ATA commands. Problem is, no one who's done all that reverse engineering is going to share that information. Which is why they lock it down in a hardware/software combo tool like PC-3000 and you have to pay into funding their work.
Could you post full model number.Well I have a kind of repair lab myself so maybe I wouldn't mind to have another tool around, even if I don't plan to use it a lot, if it has a reasonable price, ofc. Also I'm not much interested on what's on my hard drive (I can barely remember), it's more about learning new stuffI stil haven't look around for those PC3000, is something so expensive/hard to find? No cheaper alternatives?
I actually asked a quotation to a local lab in my country, they said it may cost around 600€! I understand that it's probably a small price for really valuable data, but that's definitely not my case![]()