Interesting drive failure...
Josh Dersch
derschjo at gmail.com
Wed Apr 22 00:54:42 CDT 2015
I'm attempting to dump an image of the Ridge 32/330's original SMD drive
(A Fujitsu MK2322) -- I'd been running it off of a spare, because I
didn't want to disturb what was on the original drive until I could back
it up. Now that the spare has died I figured it would be an opportune
time...
The Ridge "DISCUTIL" tool (loaded from QIC) is pretty powerful, and
amongst its weapons is the "DS" command which will dump a sector of the
disk to screen, in ASCII HEX. The Ridge has been running for the past
eight days dumping the entire 168mb disk, in HEX, at 9600 baud. Yes,
I'm insane.
Along the way I discovered that the integrity of the data on the disk is
pretty poor. There are lots of bad sectors. In particular surfaces 2
and 3 are completely unreadable for all 823 cylinders, surfaces 4 and 8
are marginal most of the time. After a lot of retries I've managed to
get most of everything (except for surfaces 2 and 3 which yield no data
at all).
So I figured that heads 2 and 3 are toast -- perhaps bad analog logic,
maybe something in the digital logic that selects the head, maybe even
bad heads, who knows.
DISCUTIL also has a "FORMAT" command that will format individual
cylinders, on a specified surface. So after I'd read out everything
possible to save, I tried it on a cylinder (801) known to have trouble
sectors, that also containing all zeros so I wouldn't wipe out anything
vital. After doing a format on cyl 801, head 2 I could read all sectors
on that cylinder/head without issue. Same with head 3, 4 and 8.
Suspecting a possible addressing fault I tried reading every surface on
cylinder 801 after formatting all surfaces on that cylinder, and they
all read without issue. (I'd expect that if, for example, when I asked
the disk to format surface 2 it actually formatted surface 5, then
reading surface 5 later would fail due to an invalid sector header for
surface 5...)
So, I suppose this is somewhat good news in that I may be able to use
the drive, but I wonder what would cause the data on the disk to fail in
such a manner (and I'm still hesitant to reformat the drive without
recovering stuff off of surfaces 2/3...) Any thoughts?
- Josh
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