Broke power supply pin

  • Thread starter Thread starter x
  • Start date Start date
X

x

On WD ATA 160 Gb drive. Specifically the 12v pin broke off at the base. WD
won't support it at all, or even provide parts. Just want to get info off
without spending big $ on data recovery. Is there such a thing as a
replacement wire that would fit in the hole (pin was hollow) and fit the
hole and the connector so that the disk would be powered? Would I be able to
pull the connector off an old hard drive? Sorry if this sounds stupid,
completely new to this, but I assume I can't be the first person this has
happened to.
 
On the underside of the HDD, near the connector are soldering points.
These are large enough to solder a wire. The points are marked
(+5v,GND,GND,+12v)

Take a female-male connector (such as an extender or spliter)
Cut the wire (near the destination) for the contact you are missing,
and solder it to the hard drive at the soldering point.

The soldering of printed boards is a delicate thing, so be carefull,
Try not to heat the board too much and don't solder any nearby points.
If you have a freind with soldering experience have him/her do it.
After connecting the wire, tape it to the plastic of the case, so there
won't be too much stress on the solder point. Make sure you are
soldering the correct wire, if you solder a 12v into a 5v circuit, you
can say "bye bye" to the drive.

This is a crude ascii art, make sure you use fixed fonts to view this:

5v -> > |>>>>>>>>>>>| > |####| o
| | | |
GND -> > |>>>>>>>>>>>| > | | o
| Extension | | HD |
GND -> > |>>>>>>>>>>>| > | | o
| | | |
12v -> > |> | X |####| o
\ |
\ |
------------------/


Regards
 
x said:
On WD ATA 160 Gb drive. Specifically the 12v pin broke off at the base. WD
won't support it at all, or even provide parts. Just want to get info off
without spending big $ on data recovery. Is there such a thing as a
replacement wire that would fit in the hole (pin was hollow) and fit the
hole and the connector so that the disk would be powered? Would I be able to
pull the connector off an old hard drive? Sorry if this sounds stupid,
completely new to this, but I assume I can't be the first person this has
happened to.

I've never examined a WD drive up close, but if it's not constructed
very differently from the other drives I've handled, it should be a
fairly simple matter. You or someone with soldering experience
could solder a short length of wire to the point on the circuit
board where the 12V pin joins it, and connect the other end of
the wire to the 12V supply line by soldering or twisting it.

Avoid touching other parts of the board, take proper precautions
against ESD and use a grounded soldering iron.
 
On the underside of the HDD, near the connector are soldering points.
These are large enough to solder a wire. The points are marked
(+5v,GND,GND,+12v)


Take a female-male connector (such as an extender or spliter)
Cut the wire (near the destination) for the contact you are missing,
and solder it to the hard drive at the soldering point.


The soldering of printed boards is a delicate thing, so be carefull,
Try not to heat the board too much and don't solder any nearby points.
If you have a freind with soldering experience have him/her do it.
After connecting the wire, tape it to the plastic of the case, so there
won't be too much stress on the solder point. Make sure you are
soldering the correct wire, if you solder a 12v into a 5v circuit, you
can say "bye bye" to the drive.


Good Luck
 
On the underside of the HDD, near the connector are soldering points.
These are large enough to solder a wire. The points are marked
(+5v,GND,GND,+12v)


Take a female-male connector (such as an extender or spliter)
Cut the wire (near the destination) for the contact you are missing,
and solder it to the hard drive at the soldering point.


The soldering of printed boards is a delicate thing, so be carefull,
Try not to heat the board too much and don't solder any nearby points.
If you have a freind with soldering experience have him/her do it.
After connecting the wire, tape it to the plastic of the case, so there
won't be too much stress on the solder point. Make sure you are
soldering the correct wire, if you solder a 12v into a 5v circuit, you
can say "bye bye" to the drive.

Good Luck
 
On WD ATA 160 Gb drive. Specifically the 12v pin broke off at the base. WD
won't support it at all, or even provide parts. Just want to get info off
without spending big $ on data recovery. Is there such a thing as a
replacement wire that would fit in the hole (pin was hollow) and fit the
hole and the connector so that the disk would be powered? Would I be able to
pull the connector off an old hard drive? Sorry if this sounds stupid,
completely new to this, but I assume I can't be the first person this has
happened to.


First determine if you want to throw away the drive after
copying off the data or to reuse it. If you only want to
copy off the data you could most easily solder a temporary
jumper wire to the pad on the circuit board. If you want to
reuse the drive then you'll want to remove the old pin, from
where it broke, on back to the point on the PCB, the
entirety of the pin, then solder on a replacement in it's
place. This second option should result in it being nearly
as good as new, though if the soldering loosens up the hole
in the plastic any then you might want a dab of epoxy on the
back (circuit-board side) to reinforce it.

Primarily, take your time and observe anti-static
precautions.
 
Near the connector, on the underside of the HDD, are soldering points.
These are large enough to solder a wire. The points are marked
(+5v,GND,GND,+12v)


Take a female-male connector (such as an extender or spliter)
Cut the wire (near the destination) for the contact you are missing,
and solder it to the hard drive at the soldering point.


The soldering of printed boards is a delicate thing, so be carefull,
Try not to heat the board too much and don't solder any nearby points.
If you have a freind with soldering experience have him/her do it.
After connecting the wire, tape it to the plastic of the case, so there
won't be too much stress on the solder point. Make sure you are
soldering the correct wire, if you solder a 12v into a 5v circuit, you
can say "bye bye" to the drive.

Good Luck
 
Moti said:
Near the connector, on the underside of the HDD, are soldering points.
These are large enough to solder a wire. The points are marked
(+5v,GND,GND,+12v)
.... snip ...

This is the fourth time you have posted this in about two hours.
There seems to be something seriously wrong with either your
newsreader or your practices.
 
Was posting via google, it gave me errors for all the posts, guess it
all went into a queue
sorry
 
Back
Top