02-15-2009 07:20 AM
@HughR
Your drive is about to die... back everything up NOW.. In less than a week it will die.. Exact same thing happened to me and my drive. And now it is dead.
02-15-2009 08:04 AM
cabose369 wrote:@HughR
Your drive is about to die... back everything up NOW.. In less than a week it will die.. Exact same thing happened to me and my drive. And now it is dead.
I'm not even using my 7200.11 drives. I don't yet trust them. What a waste.
Perhaps you meant to warn adamish -- my last message quoted from one of his messages.
02-15-2009 08:34 AM
02-15-2009 09:06 AM
Felix,
G-R-E-A-T! It works perfectly; know I know I have a SD15 firmware and the serial # of my USB drive.
Kind regards,
John
02-15-2009 09:57 AM
Hi,
I also had problems with my ST3750330AS (clicking, drive powering down)
To those with spindown problems / drive clicking: I figured out that this happens due to a power save setting that causes the drive to spin down after about 5 minutes of idling. Very annoying, and will wear down the motor rather quickly. It also took a long time to access any information on the affected drive (which worked fine before upgrading to the newest firmware.
Anyway, I booted to Linux using Ubuntu's CD, then started a terminal and used the hdparm-command to disable any spindown timers:
(warning: using other switches can mess up your drive)
hdparm /S 0 <your hard disc, e.g. /dev/sda>
This seemed to do it. Couldn't find any Windows software that would do the same thing.
from manual pages:
-S Set the standby (spindown) timeout for the drive.
This value is used by the drive to determine how
long to wait (with no disk activity) before turning
off the spindle motor to save power. Under such
circumstances, the drive may take as long as 30
seconds to respond to a subsequent disk access,
though most drives are much quicker. The encoding
of the timeout value is somewhat peculiar. A value
of zero means "off". Values from 1 to 240 specify
multiples of 5 seconds, for timeouts from 5 seconds
to 20 minutes. Values from 241 to 251 specify from
1 to 11 units of 30 minutes, for timeouts from 30
minutes to 5.5 hours. A value of 252 signifies a
timeout of 21 minutes, 253 sets a vendor-defined
timeout, and 255 is interpreted as 21 minutes plus
15 seconds.
02-15-2009 11:48 AM
02-15-2009 02:22 PM
From all I've read, yes. I bought my drives maybe 4 or 5 months ago, they worked perfectly up until a couple of weeks ago.
If you do nothing the drive could get into the 'brick' state and you'll need to send it back to seagate to get it fixed with all the hassle of packaging and postage that entails (you could also do the fix yourself, but you'll need various specialist kit and expertise).
In any case I'd definitely backup your files ASAP.
02-15-2009 03:48 PM
HughR wrote:
I'm not even using my 7200.11 drives. I don't yet trust them. What a waste.
Same here, i still use it but it feels like there is a hand grenade in my pc with the pin removed and only a hair keeping the clip down. I've ordered a WD6401AALS to replace it. I think it's absurd i have to do so but i just don't trust my ST3500320AS anymore. Common sense tells me that i should get a refund for the disk since it obviously doesn't meet the quality that reasonably can be expected. But i know the store owner where i buy my gear very well and don't want to burden her with this.
02-15-2009 04:31 PM
02-15-2009 05:45 PM
howardrg wrote:
I am trying to do the firmware update for my ST3500320AS with SD15 firmware. I downloaded the ISO image (mooredt-sd1a-2d-8-16-32mb.iso) and burned it to a CD. I attached the HD to a computer and booted from the CD. I selected option A ("download firmware to ST3500320AS") and I get an error as follows" Invalid op code ... dos mem corrupt ... PANIC: mcb chain corrupted ... system halted." How do I do the firmware upgrade?
I suggest that you use the advanced search feature of this forum to look for the phrase "invalid opcode". You are not alone.
Perhaps this is relevant http://forums.seagate.com/stx/board/message?board.
I've not had this problem. I'm just trying to be helpful.
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