On Sat, 18 Jun 2005, Philipp Hachtmann wrote:
thank you all for the tips around my harddrive
desaster. Next time I will be
wiser.
I have cleaned my removable disk's heads. Used isopropanol and a match.
Tried the crashed disk pack, crashed again immediately. Had to clean one head
again. Took another pack. No crash, no error display etc. Hope that it stays
ok.
You're very lucky!
Even though you are not having a problem now, I would spend $50 on
real cleaning materials. Here's what I suggest (others will
suggest other things). Mail order this stuff, you're unlikely to
find it retail (though Fry's Electronics here in Fornicalia
carries some of this stuff):
* 99% anhydrous alcohol -- NOT drug-store alcohol. About $7/quart
* KIM wipes or equiv 100% lint free bonded/tangle-weave wipes. $10
* Nylon-covered, fat foam swabs on sticks. $5/$10
* Craft sticks $5
* Disposable nylon gloves $?
* can of "air" (photo supply store) $10
(The gloves I was never able to find less than 1000 quantity; I
used non-powdered 8-mil latex, and washed them with
alcohol/kimwipes after I put them on. However flawed, it's gotta
beat oily finger prints. Cotton gloves are lint generators, might
as well use dryer lint.)
You need to clean the platters of the GOOD disks, before the
become CRASHED disks. Here's how I did it:
Before you start prep first. It takes 3 - 5 minutes.
Using window cleaner or other simple cleaner, wipe off the
exterior of the disk drive, disk pack, the table or whatever
you will work on, and wash all you tools. Clean everything
you'll be touching or will be near. NO DUST.
Lay a few sheets of clean, unused paper on the table. If you end
up with something delicate in your hand you'll ahve a place to put
it. The alternative is juggling or dropping it. (This is a car
trick but it's cheap and easy.)
Get access to a pack.
With gloved hands, dampen folded kimwipes (alcohol) and wipe
gently the parts you can reach. For hard-to reach use the swabs,
or wrap 2 - 3 kimwipes on a craft stick, tie a cut strip of
kimwipe to hold it on, pour alcohol on it, and wipe the platter
surface. Obviously I'm assuming you've wrapped it such that
there's no danger of wood rubbing on the platter, only kimwipe.
Repeat until the kimwipe is SPOTLESS WHITE.
Shine a bright! light down the platter edgewise; look hard for
lint standing up. If rare, blow 'em off with canned air. If "many"
clean again. Repeat until spotless.
Clean the heads again; on my DG drive I found the
kimwipe-on-craft-stick thing worked great.
Mount the platter, find the switch that disables head load (it
iwll have one; I had to disassemble the drive cabinet to expose
the guts and flip the switch.) With head load disabled, and
assuming the disk filter is clean, power up and spin up the drive.
Data General suggest ONE FULL HOUR of purge (as they call it). THe
platter is spinning at 1800 rpm or so, there's a dozen specks of
dust on there you'll never find. If the platter is otherwise clean
and not sticky (the reason for all the alcohol!) it'll fling off
in that hour.