[comp.periphs] Where to repair an old 42meg Q2040 Quantum hard drive ??

eho@clarity.Princeton.EDU (Eric Ho) (03/15/90)

Does anyone out there know where can I go to if I want to repair (and recover
data from) a bad 42meg Quantum Q2040 hard drive ?  This is a rather old 8-inch
drive I'm afraid.  I think that some of the bearings are beginning to wear out
-- it sounds a lot noiser (and the noise is coarser) than other Q2040's that
I've when I power-up the system.  This drive used to be on a Xerox D-machine
and before it goes south, the system had a bad power-supply (the power-supply
didn't just give out but the voltages were not right) so I'm not sure if this
would do anything to arms (maybe they got stuck or something) -- the status
code, I read when the system powers up now is that it could find the drive or
drive not ready when it tried to seek cylinder 0.

BTW, does anyone know of any shops that have machines that read raw bits off
the platters ?

Any pointers appreciated.
--

Eric Ho  
Princeton University
eho@clarity.princeton.edu

eho@clarity.Princeton.EDU (Eric Ho) (03/15/90)

Does anyone out there know where can I go to if I want to repair (and recover
data from) a bad 42meg Quantum Q2040 hard drive ?  This is a rather old 8-inch
drive I'm afraid.  I think that some of the bearings are beginning to wear out
-- it sounds a lot noiser (and the noise is coarser) than other Q2040's that
I've when I power-up the system.  This drive used to be on a Xerox D-machine
and before it goes south, the system had a bad power-supply (the power-supply
didn't just give out but the voltages were not right) so I'm not sure if this
would do anything to arms (maybe they got stuck or something) -- the status
code, I read when the system powers up now is that it couldn't find the drive
or drive not ready when it tried to seek cylinder 0.

BTW, does anyone know of any shops that have machines that read raw bits off
the platters ?

Any pointers appreciated.
--

Eric Ho  
Princeton University
eho@clarity.princeton.edu