Jeff,

Isn't your 7200.7 drive included in the "7200 series" which IS covered,
according to the preceding message?

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeff Kincaid
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 8:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: OT - Hard drive train wrecks that are about
to happen...

Wouldn't you know it; My dead Barracuda 7200.7 drive is not covered.

'JK

--- In [email protected]
<mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com> , Mike Morris WA6ILQ
<wa6...@...> wrote:
>
> From an email from a friend:
> 
> > Nothing like discovering that your main corporate server hard 
> drive is a time
> > bomb waiting to detonate. Or the drive in your TV station 
> production / automation
> > system, your desktop PC, or even in that external USB or firewire 
> box that has all
> > your family photos and the 100gb of MP3s... Or all the episodes 
> of Lucy you have
> > on your TiVo.
> >
> > I love the disaster-minimization marketing-speak phraseology.
> >
> > Seagate is admitting to a problem (euphemistically called, "an
isolated,
> > potential firmware issue") in 25 different hard drives models,
including
> > the Barracuda 7200 series, the Barracuda ES.2 SATA, and the
> > DiamondMax 22 series.
> >
> > In some "unique circumstances," Seagate says, "the data on the hard
> > drives may become inaccessible to the user when the host system
> > is powered on." In other words, you turn the system on and you find
> > not only that nobody's home, but the home has evaporated.
> >
> > This upcoming train wreck is fully documented on Segates web
site... See:
> >
<http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/selfservice/news.jsp?DocId=207931
<http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/selfservice/news.jsp?DocId=207931> >
> >
> > Some of these drives may be mounted in external Seagate (or other
> > brand) hard drives, such as the FreeAgent Pro.
> >
> >The actual model list, in numberical order is:
> >
> > ST31000333AS
> > ST31000340AS
> > ST31000340NS
> > ST31500341AS
> > ST3160813AS
> > ST3250310NS
> > ST3320613AS
> > ST3320813AS
> > ST3500320AS
> > ST3500320NS
> > ST3500620AS
> > ST3500820AS
> > ST3640323AS
> > ST3640330AS
> > ST3640530AS
> > ST3640623AS
> > ST3750330AS
> > ST3750330NS
> > ST3750630AS
> > STM31000334AS
> > STM31000340AS
> > STM3160813AS
> > STM3320614AS
> > STM3500320AS
> > STM3750330AS
> >
> > The quickest way to determine if your drive is on the list is to
download
> > and run Seagate's Drive Detect. program available from
> > <http://support.seagate.com/kbimg/utils/drivedetect.exe
<http://support.seagate.com/kbimg/utils/drivedetect.exe> >
> > and see what your system has in it, then compare the list to the
table
> > above. If your drive is doomed, you can download and install a free
> > firmware upgrade from the model-specific link in the above web page.
> >
> > For assistance in updating the firmware, customers can send an email
> > to Seagate at disksupp...@... that includes the disk drive
> > serial number, model number, and current firmware revision (which
is .
> > read and displayed by the drivedetect.exe program above).
> >
> > Support is also available through Seagate's call center
> > 800-732-4283
> 
> Mike Morris WA6ILQ
>



 

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