Must have the following characteristics:
Seagate 7200.11 - 750 gb
model: ST3750330AS
P/N: 9BX156-303
firmware: SD15
A friend of mine had their drive die and I think it's just a bad PCB so I need a donor drive...
Please PM price!
Thanks!
Kevin
Must have the following characteristics:
Seagate 7200.11 - 750 gb
model: ST3750330AS
P/N: 9BX156-303
firmware: SD15
A friend of mine had their drive die and I think it's just a bad PCB so I need a donor drive...
Please PM price!
Thanks!
Kevin
Last edited by boosty; 05-07-2010 at 12:41 PM.
Turbo lag... the courtious head start you give your opponent.
Moeman, you rock the casbah. THANK YOU!
Kevin
Edit: I still need a drive, but Moeman still rocks the casbah.
Last edited by boosty; 05-07-2010 at 12:43 PM.
Turbo lag... the courtious head start you give your opponent.
Bump. I actually still need this... the MemEx one they couldn't find and the warranty replacement I got back from Seagate has the current SD1A firmware on it which doesn't work.
I need a drive with the original SD15 firmware on it. Willing to pay above market value for the drive.
Turbo lag... the courtious head start you give your opponent.
Try flashing the older firmware onto it? Otherwise, hit eBay and start asking sellers for complete specs!
Thanks for the suggestion Grogador. It was a real bitch to find, but I was somehow able to track down the older SD15 firmware, modify the Seagate bootable disk for the SD1A firmware to flash the older firmware and then reflash the replacement drive that Seagate sent me. I then swapped the pcb, but sadly, the drive just made a ton of clicking noises and the bios reported a hdd error so it's obviously more than just a bad pcb. Ah well, it was worth a shot and an interesting learning experience.
Anyhow, guess I don't need a drive anymore. Mods, please close. Thanks!
Turbo lag... the courtious head start you give your opponent.
if you have no other choices:Originally posted by boosty
Thanks for the suggestion Grogador. It was a real bitch to find, but I was somehow able to track down the older SD15 firmware, modify the Seagate bootable disk for the SD1A firmware to flash the older firmware and then reflash the replacement drive that Seagate sent me. I then swapped the pcb, but sadly, the drive just made a ton of clicking noises and the bios reported a hdd error so it's obviously more than just a bad pcb. Ah well, it was worth a shot and an interesting learning experience.
Anyhow, guess I don't need a drive anymore. Mods, please close. Thanks!
1) Throw it in the freezer in a ziploc for a couple of hours, plug it in while still cold, might give you enough time to get some files off.
2) Drop the drive onto a concrete floor from waist high, the jarring might allow you to get the drive going for a short time to get the files off.
I suggest the freezer trick first.
Yes, I know old wives tales, but both have worked for me in the past.