Another way if you are skilled and have the tools: find an exposed diode, unsolder and resolder in the reverse direction. Then power it up. > -----Original Message----- > From: Charles Steinkuehler [mailto:charles@steinkuehler.net] > Sent: Monday, September 15, 2003 2:30 PM > To: Kris Bodenheimer > Cc: KCLug > Subject: Re: IBM Deathstar Hell > > > Kris Bodenheimer wrote: > > I have a deathstar that develops "bad sectors" every 2 > days, using IBM's > > Drive fitness utility I am on my 4th "erase and repair disk" which > > appears to be a low level formatting. The drive is under > warranty for > > 3 more months, but I can't get the Drive fitness utility to > give me an > > error that earns me an RMA. Anyone know how to "help" this > drive along > > its slow death? BTW this will be the 10th IBM Deathstar to > go to hell > > in the past 2 months. Kris > > Find a dry location (low humidity) > > Get a piece of 70's shag carpet (bonus points for avacado green) > > Do a dance to the HDD gods (moon-walking works well). You > know you're > doing it right if a fluorescent bulb you're simply holding in > your hand > illuminates when you move your feet. > > Select a large, important looking IC, and while chanting "The > DeathStar > will never defeat the powers of good", point your finger at > the IC in a > meanicing manner, then actually touch some of the pins. > Alternatively, > hold one end of the fluorescent tube and point the other end at the > drive...when the tube lights (may require a dimmed room to see if you > don't have really low humidity and good shag carpet) your > work is done. > > Repeat as required until Drive Fitness gives you an > acceptable error code. > > Alternate methods would include: > > - Hit the drive a couple of times with a cattle prod, electric fence, > neon sign transformer, or similar high-voltage low-current supply. > > - Hook a wire to the 12V supply and randomly touch connections on the > drive with the other end (with power applied). Be careful with this > technique, however...if you latch up one of the controller IC's, it's > possible for the case to pop off rather explosively, so make > sure your > eyes are out of the path of any possible projectiles. > > - Put some *VERY* important data on the drive, then erase all other > backups. This should guarantee drive failure, but probably > not until a > few days *AFTER* the warrenty period expires. > > - Soak the drive in liquid nitrogen, then drop on concrete to > shatter it > into 1000's of little pieces (What's the drive fitness code for this > one? :-) > > -- > Charles Steinkuehler > charles@steinkuehler.net > > > > > majordomo@kclug.org >