Hi all! I'm not in the business, but just a guy who invested too much time in youtube tutorials who now thinks he may be able to pull this off 
My question is easy: After I swap the heads, will I need to align, calibrate, program anything? The videos show how to swap heads, but the videos stop there and I'm not sure if there is anything else to know after putting the cover back on. Is it really that straightforward?
In my defense, if someone can use packing tape and random bits of plastic to swap platters on a workbench, then maybe it's not too laughable for me to try swapping heads https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZx-tU1_gOw
Here is the full story if anyone is interested:
My drive is about 6 years old and I left youtube auto-playing all night only awaken to a frozen pc. The drive spins up and sounds normal to an untrained ear, but it causes the bios to hang for a long time and finally isn't recognized. A couple guys have already predicted that the problem probably is not the PCB, so I'm assuming the heads are at fault.
My plan is to (hopefully) find an identical drive and first try the PCB/ROM swap. If that doesn't work, I'll swap the heads. But before I put the plan into action, I need to know if anything requires alignment or if the heads really are "plug n play".
All comments and criticism is welcome. Thanks!
My question is easy: After I swap the heads, will I need to align, calibrate, program anything? The videos show how to swap heads, but the videos stop there and I'm not sure if there is anything else to know after putting the cover back on. Is it really that straightforward?
In my defense, if someone can use packing tape and random bits of plastic to swap platters on a workbench, then maybe it's not too laughable for me to try swapping heads https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZx-tU1_gOw
Here is the full story if anyone is interested:
My drive is about 6 years old and I left youtube auto-playing all night only awaken to a frozen pc. The drive spins up and sounds normal to an untrained ear, but it causes the bios to hang for a long time and finally isn't recognized. A couple guys have already predicted that the problem probably is not the PCB, so I'm assuming the heads are at fault.
My plan is to (hopefully) find an identical drive and first try the PCB/ROM swap. If that doesn't work, I'll swap the heads. But before I put the plan into action, I need to know if anything requires alignment or if the heads really are "plug n play".
All comments and criticism is welcome. Thanks!