Seagate® Barracuda® 7200.11 Hard Drive

image The Seagate® Barracuda® 7200.11 hard drive offers an unmatched combination of reliability, performance and capacity, and is backed by a 5-year limited warranty. The Barracuda 7200.11 drive—the eleventh generation of this award-winning desktop hard drive family—delivers up to 1 TB of reliable digital storage. The drive is the ideal choice for mainstream PCs, performance PCs, gaming and workstations, desktop RAID and external storage devices.

Kit Includes:

  • Hard drive
  • Product Manual
  • 5 years Limited Warranty

Product Highlights:

  • Designed with four disks to provide the optimal balance of advanced technology and low total cost of ownership
  • Eleventh-generation drive in the successful, award-winning Barracuda® product family
  • Enables up to 1 TB of storage capacity (other capacities at 500 GB and 750 GB)
  • Industry’s most reliable hard drive with proven second-generation perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR) technology
  • Leverages best combination of technology (areal density, PMR) and proven components for volume shipping
  • Industry-leading acoustics and power consumption levels
  • 105-MB/s sustained data rate
  • 32-MB cache
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Resolve O LBA, Seagate 7200.11 BIOS don’t recognize (Part II)

PART 2

If your HDD 7200.11 is not recognize by BIOS,

and after you connect him to COM1 and turn on power if you have this response for any command like:

Rst 0x10M
LED:000000CC FAddr:0025BF67
Ctrl + Z
F3 T>
LED:000000CC FAddr:0025BF67
your drive is busy!

power off your Hdd
slightly unscrew one screw near to motor connection to PCB and put plastic visit card! Or you can remove PCB.
Effect is the same…
power on your hdd,

Ctrl +Z

F3 T>/2
F3 2>
F3 2>Z

Spin Down Complete
Elapsed Time 0.138 msecs
F3 2>

now you put PCB back, or pull visit card
enter this
F3 2>U
Spin Up Complete
Elapsed Time 7.242 seconds
F3 2>

F3 T>/1
F3 1>N1
this is a S.M.A.R.T. erase

after that POWER off HDD, it means that you plug off power to hdd,
power on hdd,
reenter
CTRL+Z on terminal
F3 T>i4,1,22
this is G-list erase

after that POWER off HDD, it means that you plug off power to hdd,
reenter
CTRL+Z on terminal
F3 T>m0,2,2,0,0,0,0,22 Enter

!!!IMPORTANT, don’t turn hdd power off, or comp off, wait about 30 sec to 2 minutes until it finished!!!

then you see something like this.

Max Wr Retries = 00, Max Rd Retries = 00, Max ECC T-Level = 14, Max Certify Rewrite Retries = 00C8 Max retries Wr = 00, Max Rd retries = 00, Max T-ECC Level = 14, Max certify Rewrite retries = 00C8
User Partition Format 10% complete, Zone 00, Pass 00, LBA 00004339, ErrCode 00000080, Elapsed Time 0 mins 05 secs User Partition Format 10% complete, Zone 00, Pass 00, LBA 00004339, ErrCode 00000080, Elapsed Time 0 mins 05 secs
User Partition Format Successful – Elapsed Time 0 mins 05 secs User Partition Successful Format – Elapsed Time 0 mins 05 secs

After that hit

F3 T>/2
and
F3 2>Z
Spin Down Complete
Elapsed Time 3.038 msecs

Turn off power from your HDD, od shutdown your comp.

That’s all!

WARNING: Please do NOT try this if you have valuable data on your drive. Do not blame anyone if something goes wrong. You do it at your own risk. Remember that if something goes wrong, it is extremely unlikely that anyone will be able to help you remotely. One wrong command via terminal could easily result in a completely bricked HDD (I really do mean bricked = no one will be able to recover it, even Seagate).

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Resolve O LBA, Seagate 7200.11 BIOS don’t recognize (Part I)

This tutorial is not for inexperienced users!!! Do NOT POWER OFF YOUR hdd, computer, during it, (EXCEPT IF I SAY SO)and you just to be sure connect your computer to UPS.

First you must have to build serial rs232 converter to TX,RX GND, you can use any data cable from your cell phone from Siemens 35 series custom build data cable buid on this picture with max232. Be sure that you put zener diode 2V7 at the picture..Because you could burn your Tx, Rx, on HDD-s PCB.

So, when you build, get your adapter, connect it to this pins on Seagate drive.
[ ”””””””’| |””””’ ] [ .. ..] —-> Rx.. Tx
You do not need to connect SERIAL-ATA CABEL
open hyper terminal or another type of terminal select Serial port example “COM1”
set bit rate to 38400bps
data bits 8
parity N
stop bits 1

it’s default settings except bps.
plug power to disk and after that you will see on terminal something like this:

PART 1

Rst 0x10M
hit Ctrl + Z to get “prompt”
F3 T>

now, if your BIOS recognize disk but there is 0 LBA,0 capacity

all you need is to hit this command:

F3 T>m0,2,2,0,0,0,0,22 Enter

!!!IMPORTANT, don’t turn hdd power off, or comp off, wait about 30 sec to 2 minutes until it finished!!!

then you see something like this.

Max Wr Retries = 00, Max Rd Retries = 00, Max ECC T-Level = 14, Max Certify Rewrite Retries = 00C8 Max retries Wr = 00, Max Rd retries = 00, Max T-ECC Level = 14, Max certify Rewrite retries = 00C8
User Partition Format 10% complete, Zone 00, Pass 00, LBA 00004339, Err Code 00000080, Elapsed Time 0 minutes 05 seconds User Partition Format 10% complete, Zone 00, Pass 00, LBA 00004339, Err Code 00000080, Elapsed Time 0 minutes 05 seconds
User Partition Format Successful – Elapsed Time 0 minutes 05 seconds User Partition Successful Format – Elapsed Time 0 minutes 05 seconds

After that hit

F3 T>/2
and
F3 2>Z
Spin Down Complete
Elapsed Time 3.038 msecs

Turn off power from your HDD, od shutdown your computer.

WARNING: Please do NOT try this if you have valuable data on your drive. Do not blame anyone if something goes wrong. You do it at your own risk. Remember that if something goes wrong, it is extremely unlikely that anyone will be able to help you remotely. One wrong command via terminal could easily result in a completely bricked HDD (I really do mean bricked = no one will be able to recover it, even Seagate).

WARNING: Please do NOT try this if you have valuable data on your drive. Do not blame anyone if something goes wrong. You do it at your own risk. Remember that if something goes wrong, it is extremely unlikely that anyone will be able to help you remotely. One wrong command via terminal could easily result in a completely bricked HDD (I really do mean bricked = no one will be able to recover it, even Seagate).

Read More