Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!portal!cup.portal.com!thad From: thad@cup.portal.com (Thad P Floryan) Newsgroups: comp.sys.att Subject: Re: HELP with 7300 hard disk PLEASE Message-ID: <10743@cup.portal.com> Date: 1 Nov 88 09:43:22 GMT References: <1311@plx.UUCP> Organization: The Portal System (TM) Lines: 66 Walt Novinger is having problems with his Seagate ST251 ... Welcome to the club. But, one question: does the drive SPIN? Don't laugh. I have a bunch of ST251 drives that do NOT spin up consistently and the first time that happened I started sweating icicles. My first thought was a "bad" controller card (the one that is bolted to the back of the drives), and I called Seagate Customer Support (in Florida; figure that one out) and discovered that all Seagate does is exchange drives. Not very useful if you want to retrieve data that hasn't been backed up (let THAT be a lesson!). Finally, persevered and managed to reach the Manager of QA at Seagate in Scotts Valley, CA, and was told essentially the same story: they don't repair drives, wouldn't send me a PC card, and they don't have spare parts. By this time, I had already discovered the drive wasn't spinning up. Being the curious sort, I started examining all aspects of the drive. Poked here, prodded there, uttered a few choice epithets, and was seriously considering the sure-fire-cure: dancing under a full moon in my Jockey shorts while swinging a dead chicken over my head! :-) Well, to make a long story short: I started idly twisting the stepper motor shaft using an Allen wrench, about 15 degrees each way. Decided to attempt to power up the drive one more time before chucking it out the window and over the fence when, LO!, whi-r-r-r-r-r-r. It SPUN! Twisted the shaft of another one, powered it up, and it, too, spun. Whew! Did I back up those disks quickly. First thing next morning, called Seagate (Scotts Valley) QA Manager and discussed my findings. An engineer was consulted and confirmed that the ST251 drive has "failsafes" to prevent main spindle rotation IF the arms don't come out of `park' during the power up sequence. My "twisting" the stepper motor shaft a bit must have loosened up whatever it was that prevented the arms coming out of park. Don't know what, since the drives are normally powered 24 hrs/day, 7 days/week, and they were off for only a few hours while I was experimenting with other aspects of the system. NOW: the interesting thing is, ALL of my ST251 have the same date code: 8707 (a big number stamped alongside the frame). But I've heard in other newsgroups of others having problems with the ST251 also, and the solution was the same "fix." BE FORWARNED: the "fix" is only temporary. The ones I still have continue to exhibit the problem occasionally upon power up. Once the drives are spinning, they operate fine. But I'm really disappointed about these problems and have switched almost exclusively now to other manufacturers (e.g. Maxtor) though I am having excellent performance from an ST157N. As near as I can determine, the problem ONLY exists with the ST251-0 (the "-0" is often identified by an "MLC-0" sticker); the ST251-1 (also MLC-1) drives don't (yet) appear to have such a problem (but perhaps it's too early for the problem to surface). For reference: the MLC-0 drives are the 39mS ones and the MLC-1 drives are the 28mS ones. SUMMARY: twist the stepper motor shaft a wee bit using a dowel, screwdriver, Allen wrench, whatever), power up the drive and get your data off it ASAP. As mine have shown, the drives will continue to present problems, so I'd suggest looking for a replacement HD before yours fails totally. Thad Floryan [thad@cup.portal.com (OR) ...!sun!portal!cup.portal.com!thad]