Jared":vjuh9bnb said:Why risk the possibility of losing your data permanently (which will happen if you overheat the ROM chip) when a simple test could clearly tell you that it isn't the problem (which it almost certainly isn't in your case).
Good point about the heat on the rom chip... I didn't consider that risk enough before.
Yes, no one is suggesting you try to fix it through terminal at this point, we're just suggesting you connect it and power on the drive. On startup the drive will post a log of what's going on which we can use to diagnose the issue.
Oh I see. Will I need to type a command to produce the log or will it generate on its own?
It's on the platters, not on the PCB. The only thing on the PCB is the ROM (read only memory) which is only a small fraction of the firmware code and as the name implies is read only. If the ROM were bad, the drive almost certainly wouldn't spin at all.
Thanks for clearing that up since that was the source of my confusion. If the corruption of the firmware is on the platter, is that even fixable?
Also, I haven't tried the drive since cleaning the contacts. Do you think I should try it or wait for the TTL adapter?
In addition to the adapter, I need to buy a new drive. I don't care about longevity anymore, but was wondering which drives are easiest to recover data from. In that light, should I buy another seagate or a WD? Seagates seem to fail more (according to random comments online), but if recovery is easier, then I'll get another. Plus I'll have the adapter and knowledge. It will be an OS drive, so 1TB or smaller? The smaller it is, the less data I can lose :lol: