Suggestions How to Test No Spin Hard Drives?

K

KenO

Guest
Hi,

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube will cause the disk from spinning.

Did some searching and found

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/WH68qfkAAfM/51WIPwZL8yMJ

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/CDnXwrweST0/6_Sr72pRKUsJ

for specific HDDs but to date No general info on what to test.

Googled using how test "Hard drives" got a lot of hits but nothing helpful to no spin testing to date.

Then decided to try http://www.repairfaq.org and searched with how test "Hard drives" but only got "The Drexel mirror site of the Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ is temporarily unavailable..."

Appreciate any suggestions

Ken
 
On 25/01/18 08:40, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.

Around 1992 we had to do that (after each power failure) on
a Fujitsu Eagle hard drive. Pretty difficult; it took two
strong people to coordinate a twist on a 60kg drive without
dropping it.
 
On 24-1-2018 18:18, KenO wrote:
Hi,

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube will cause the disk from spinning.

Did some searching and found

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/WH68qfkAAfM/51WIPwZL8yMJ

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/CDnXwrweST0/6_Sr72pRKUsJ

for specific HDDs but to date No general info on what to test.

Googled using how test "Hard drives" got a lot of hits but nothing helpful to no spin testing to date.

Then decided to try http://www.repairfaq.org and searched with how test "Hard drives" but only got "The Drexel mirror site of the Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ is temporarily unavailable..."

Appreciate any suggestions

Ken
I have "repaired"an old DOS computer with a stuck harddisk.
Just gave the case a hard jerk around.
It worked.
Then made a backup............(it was not MY computer).

So give the HD a gentle slam to rotate it and see if it works.
If not slam some more. The disk might wake up.

Do this in off state, then test.
 
Or as my old carpenter foreman used to say:

When in doubt, get a bigger hammer!

Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
 
On Wednesday, 24 January 2018 17:18:36 UTC, KenO wrote:
Hi,

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube will cause the disk from spinning.

Did some searching and found

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/WH68qfkAAfM/51WIPwZL8yMJ

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/CDnXwrweST0/6_Sr72pRKUsJ

for specific HDDs but to date No general info on what to test.

Googled using how test "Hard drives" got a lot of hits but nothing helpful to no spin testing to date.

Then decided to try http://www.repairfaq.org and searched with how test "Hard drives" but only got "The Drexel mirror site of the Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ is temporarily unavailable..."

Appreciate any suggestions

Ken

This problem was fairly common when HDDs first went down to 3.5" form factor. The standard solution was to plastic bag them and freeze them.

If the head's glued to the disc surface, slamming it's likely to rip the head off. It's a last resort option only.


NT
 
If the alternative is landfill, many alternate means-and-methods open up.

Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
 
<tabbypurr@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:6e1f60bd-8a8c-4afb-bc24-e51f99b2eef5@googlegroups.com...
On Wednesday, 24 January 2018 17:18:36 UTC, KenO wrote:
Hi,

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were
working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube
will cause the disk from spinning.

Did some searching and found

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/WH68qfkAAfM/51WIPwZL8yMJ

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/CDnXwrweST0/6_Sr72pRKUsJ

for specific HDDs but to date No general info on what to test.

Googled using how test "Hard drives" got a lot of hits but nothing
helpful to no spin testing to date.

Then decided to try http://www.repairfaq.org and searched with how test
"Hard drives" but only got "The Drexel mirror site of the
Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ is temporarily unavailable..."

Appreciate any suggestions

Ken

This problem was fairly common when HDDs first went down to 3.5" form
factor. The standard solution was to plastic bag them and freeze them.

If the head's glued to the disc surface, slamming it's likely to rip the
head off. It's a last resort option only.

Ripping stuck stuck heads off wasn't very unusual with old drives that had
exposed flywheel on the spindle motor. back in the days of head steppers -
you could sometimes get at that too.

Never tried putting one in the fridge, but it sounds less likely to do
damage - if that doesn't work; resort to violence. Clonking it on the desk
might free it - too little wont free it, too much might shift coating off
the platters. some drives sense failure to spin up and pulse the head servo
to try and free it - careful timing when you clonk it might add that little
bit extra that helps the drive fix itself.
 
Worst case: give them to the children to disassemble for the magnets.
You need a REALLY tiny Phillips for the last screws.

--
Cheers, Bev
If trees could scream, would we be so cavalier about cutting
them down? We might, if they screamed all the time, for
no good reason. - Jack Handy
 
On Wed, 24 Jan 2018 20:07:07 -0000, "Ian Field"
<gangprobing.alien1@virginmedia.com> wrote:

tabbypurr@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:6e1f60bd-8a8c-4afb-bc24-e51f99b2eef5@googlegroups.com...
On Wednesday, 24 January 2018 17:18:36 UTC, KenO wrote:
Hi,

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were
working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube
will cause the disk from spinning.

Did some searching and found

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/WH68qfkAAfM/51WIPwZL8yMJ

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/sci.electronics.repair/how$20test$20no$20spin$20hard$20drives%7Csort:date/sci.electronics.repair/CDnXwrweST0/6_Sr72pRKUsJ

for specific HDDs but to date No general info on what to test.

Googled using how test "Hard drives" got a lot of hits but nothing
helpful to no spin testing to date.

Then decided to try http://www.repairfaq.org and searched with how test
"Hard drives" but only got "The Drexel mirror site of the
Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ is temporarily unavailable..."

Appreciate any suggestions

Ken

This problem was fairly common when HDDs first went down to 3.5" form
factor. The standard solution was to plastic bag them and freeze them.

If the head's glued to the disc surface, slamming it's likely to rip the
head off. It's a last resort option only.

Ripping stuck stuck heads off wasn't very unusual with old drives that had
exposed flywheel on the spindle motor. back in the days of head steppers -
you could sometimes get at that too.

Never tried putting one in the fridge, but it sounds less likely to do
damage - if that doesn't work; resort to violence. Clonking it on the desk
might free it - too little wont free it, too much might shift coating off
the platters. some drives sense failure to spin up and pulse the head servo
to try and free it - careful timing when you clonk it might add that little
bit extra that helps the drive fix itself.

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.
 
On 25/01/18 19:14, tabbypurr@gmail.com wrote:
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 08:11:54 UTC, tabby wrote:
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 00:02:21 UTC, Clifford Heath wrote:
On 25/01/18 08:40, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.

Around 1992 we had to do that (after each power failure) on
a Fujitsu Eagle hard drive. Pretty difficult; it took two
strong people to coordinate a twist on a 60kg drive without
dropping it.

how many platters did that have??
Even the original 2' wide rusty platter stack didn't come in at 60kg iirc.
11x 10.5" platters, 4k rpm, 30 second spin-up time.

I never weighed one, just took a guess. It was a difficult thing
to lift and apply power then a rapid rotational jerk to however.
Then gently lift it back into the rack to avoid crashing anything.
540MB if I recall - I don't even have a thumb drive that small any
more.
 
On Wed, 24 Jan 2018 15:20:00 -0500, Pat wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can,

Agree. If you want to augment the torque by a few orders of magnitude, get
a flat sanding attachment for a drill and duct tape the disk to the
attachment. You should be able to quite accurately guess the position of
the main axis by looking at the housing; if not find the model# on the web
and look for a service document with a cutaway view.

Presuming your drill is reversable, you can easily alternate the torque
between successive trigger pulls if the drill is clamped. The goal is not
to spin it fast; rather to quickly cause it to reverse direction.
 
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.
 
On 2018/01/24 1:40 PM, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.

"Shake & Bake" were the methods used to get stuck drives to spin up in
the 80s. The shake was a twist as described, the bake was to warm the
unit to around 100C to soften the lubes...and then you immediately
sucked the data off and trashed the sick drive.

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd.
MOVED to #7 - 3979 Marine Way, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5J 5E3
(604)872-5757 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
 
On 1/24/2018 12:30 PM, pfjw@aol.com wrote:
Or as my old carpenter foreman used to say:

When in doubt, get a bigger hammer!

Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA


Had an MFM drive I got to work by standing on end.


If a "jerk" does not do the trick on an ATA drive I've also opened them
up and gentry nudged the arm.

Back up at once as the drive will not function long
 
On Wednesday, January 24, 2018 at 9:18:36 AM UTC-8, KenO wrote:

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube will cause the disk from spinning.

Yes, motor power is sometimes a problem: first thing to do is listen very hard. If it IS
spinning, don't hit it...
but if it isn't, the motor control will shut down a second after power is applied, so what
you want to do is give the drive a brisk twist just after applying power. Set the drive
on a horizontal surface, flip on power and quickly rap one corner so as to make the
drive twist position slightly... try both directions. You must switch the power off
and wait a few seconds between each trial. Give it a dozen tries (use a stick,
no sense getting bruised).

Apply heat (hair dryer is fine) to warm the case, wait a few minutes, and try again. You just
want the aluminum parts warm so the lubricant softens.

If that doesn't work, examine the drive electronics, sometimes it's just
a shorted diode on the power pins. And, sometimes there's a scorched odor
and a crater in one of the black plastic rectangles...
 
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 00:02:21 UTC, Clifford Heath wrote:
On 25/01/18 08:40, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.

Around 1992 we had to do that (after each power failure) on
a Fujitsu Eagle hard drive. Pretty difficult; it took two
strong people to coordinate a twist on a 60kg drive without
dropping it.

how many platters did that have??
Even the original 2' wide rusty platter stack didn't come in at 60kg iirc.


NT
 
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 08:11:54 UTC, tabby wrote:
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 00:02:21 UTC, Clifford Heath wrote:
On 25/01/18 08:40, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.

Around 1992 we had to do that (after each power failure) on
a Fujitsu Eagle hard drive. Pretty difficult; it took two
strong people to coordinate a twist on a 60kg drive without
dropping it.

how many platters did that have??
Even the original 2' wide rusty platter stack didn't come in at 60kg iirc.


NT

11x 10.5" platters, 4k rpm, 30 second spin-up time.


NT
 
Il giorno mercoledĂŹ 24 gennaio 2018 18:18:36 UTC+1, KenO ha scritto:
Hi,

A while ago put a number of HDDs in storage.

Recently tried to use and noticed that some do Not spin up (all were working when put in storage).

Had read that sometimes the heads will stick or other factors like lube will cause the disk from spinning.

when the disk is powered off the heads are parked, and if the heads touch the platters then you can throw the HD in the trash.

If it doesn't spin up it's because the bearings of the motor are stuck. A gentle but firm poke on the side of the disk should help. Also putting the HD in vertical instead of horizontal position when it power up may help. Or shaking it a little.

Bye Jack
 
"John Robertson" <spam@flippers.com> wrote in message
news:mZidnWkj6PCjhvTHnZ2dnUU7-L2dnZ2d@giganews.com...
On 2018/01/24 1:40 PM, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.



"Shake & Bake" were the methods used to get stuck drives to spin up in the
80s. The shake was a twist as described, the bake was to warm the unit to
around 100C to soften the lubes...and then you immediately sucked the data
off and trashed the sick drive.

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd.
MOVED to #7 - 3979 Marine Way, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5J 5E3
(604)872-5757 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."

http://www.alps.com/prod/info/E/PDF/Potentiometer/TAPER.pdf
 
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 09:45:34 UTC, Clifford Heath wrote:
On 25/01/18 19:14, tabbypurr wrote:
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 08:11:54 UTC, tabby wrote:
On Thursday, 25 January 2018 00:02:21 UTC, Clifford Heath wrote:
On 25/01/18 08:40, Dave Platt wrote:
In article <gbqh6dd69pkn29i6icke6r32cg1ij6jlu5@4ax.com>,
Pat <pat@nospam.us> wrote:

I always tried a mechanical fix BUT NOT slamming them down or
hammering on them. Rotate them! If you hold them with your fingers
on the sides and rotate them as quickly as you can, the mass of the
platters tries to keep them stationary while you rotate the case. I
haven't tried that in years since I haven't needed to, but it used to
work.

+1 to this. It worked well enough for me, years ago, that I was able
to do some data rescue from a couple of drives which declined to spin
up on their own after sitting idle for a year or two.

Around 1992 we had to do that (after each power failure) on
a Fujitsu Eagle hard drive. Pretty difficult; it took two
strong people to coordinate a twist on a 60kg drive without
dropping it.

how many platters did that have??
Even the original 2' wide rusty platter stack didn't come in at 60kg iirc.
11x 10.5" platters, 4k rpm, 30 second spin-up time.

I never weighed one, just took a guess. It was a difficult thing
to lift and apply power then a rapid rotational jerk to however.
Then gently lift it back into the rack to avoid crashing anything.
540MB if I recall - I don't even have a thumb drive that small any
more.

sounds like an improvement on:
1956 IBM 350. fifty 24-inch (0.6 m) platters, total capacity (3.75 megabytes).


NT
 

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