Western Digital PCB 2060-701675-001 REV P1

Swap Western Digital Circuit Board 2060-701675-001 REV P1 to recover data from damaged hard drives due to PCB failure. 2060-701675-001 REV P1 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

Western Digital PCB 2060-701675-001 REV P1:

Board No.: 2060-701675-001 REV P1
Main Controller IC: 88i9045-TFJ2

Western digital pcb board 2060-701675-001 has 2 different types:

One has 2 BIOS, as the below photo:

When you swap this western digital PCB, you should move both the BIOS(U12&U14 chips) from your original wd PCB’s BIOS to the replacement board.

Western Digital PCB 2060-701675-001 REV P1

Other one just has 1 BIOS, as the below photo:

Western Digital PCB 2060-701675-001 REV P1

Western digital pcb 2060-701675-004 REV P1 also has the 2 different types as WD 2060-701675-001 REV P1 2.5″ one.

More Western Digital 2.5″ Laptop PCB please visit HDDzone.com.

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Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196

Swap Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196 to recover your data from damaged HDD due to PCB failure. 20100435196 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

100435196 Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board Details:

Board Number: 100435196
Main Controller IC: TTB4398A0/V520AA
HDD Motor Combo IC: SH6960BE/100369972

This circuit board has 2 different types:

1. Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196 has no small chips:

Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196

2. Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196 has smaller chips:

Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196

If you need this pcb board you can order it online on HDDZone.com

Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB Circuit Board 100435196

More Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 PCB on HDDZone.com

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WD 2060-701335-005 PCB

Hard Drive Circuit BoardSwap WD 2060-701335-005 PCB(Printed Circuit Boards) to recover your data from damaged HDD due to PCB failure. 2060-701335-005 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

WD 2060-701335-005 PCB Board Details:

Board Number: 2060-701335-005
Main Controller IC: 88i6545-TFJ1
HDD Motor Combo IC: L6283 1.3
Series: Western Digital PCB

Note: Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure.

Swap WD 2060-701335-005 PCB Circuit Board will not solve the problem below:

1. The hard drive will power up normally (no ticking noises, errors etc) but will not be recognized by the computer;
2. The hard drive will power up normally and be recognized correctly but will report a size of 0 bytes;
3. The hard drive will power up but report SMART errors on boot;

WD 2060-701335-005 PCB Photos:

WD 2060-701335-005 PCB

Order Online: WD 2060-701335-005 PCB

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How to Clear a Hard Drive?

How to Clear a Hard DriveHow to Clear a Hard Drive:

1. Bear in mind that files you deleted are not truly deleted. Data can remain even after that part of the physical disk is overwritten a number times!

2. Save all the files you really need. It’s a terrible feeling when you realize that you forgot to save a folder of pictures or an important Word document. Take a little time to search through your hard drive to make sure that you collected everything you need. Burn these files to a CD-ROM or save them to another kind of external media.

3. Reformat your hard drive. The procedure with this will differ depending on what kind of operating system you are using. If you’re using Windows XP, just insert the install CD-ROM you received when you bought the computer and delete your hard drive’s partition. This is usually “C:”(primary Partition). You must then create a new C: partition and then format it using that install disc. Choose the “quick format” option and your hard drive is cleared.

4. Invest in a program that truly obliterates the data on your hard drive if you want everything really clean. The best programs perform this act to the Department of Defense’s 5220.22-M standard. Just install the program and follow the onscreen directions to clear your drive.

5. Employ the hard drive’s best friend and worst enemy: magnetism. Your hard drive aligns or shifts magnetic particles to save data. If you have a big or strong enough magnet, you can destroy this organization and end up with a hard drive that has absolutely no data on it at all. You should remove the hard drive before you do this, so you don’t cause a problem in your other components.

10 Tips for Clearing a Hard Drive

  • Your browser logs every website you have visited.
  • Your computer contains many temporary web page files.
  • Adware and cookie files can be used to spy on your web surfing.
  • Many programs store passwords, credit card numbers, and other sensitive data.
  • Pressing the Delete key will not erase a file permanently.
  • Programs often make use of temporary files when performing program functions.
  • Autosave backup files are automatically generated by some applications.
  • Windows stores your search terms.
  • Swap files inadvertently contain sensitive data.
  • Gaps between files contain old data.
  • Permanently removing sensitive data requires advanced hard drive clean up software.
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Seagate 100466824 Barracuda 7200.11 PCB

Swap 100466824 Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 PCB(Printed Circuit Boards) to recover your data from damaged HDD due to PCB failure. 100466824 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

Seagate 100466824 Barracuda 7200.11 PCB Board Details:

Board Number: 100466824
Main Controller IC: TTB5501D
Motor Combo IC: 100439116
Series: Seagate Barracuda 7200.11

Note: Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure.

Swap Seagate 100466824 Barracuda 11 PCB will not solve the problem below:

1. The hard drive will power up normally (no ticking noises, errors etc) but will not be recognized by the computer;
2. The hard drive will power up normally and be recognized correctly but will report a size of 0 bytes;
3. The hard drive will power up but report SMART errors on boot;

100466824 Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 PCB Photos:

Seagate 100466824 Barracuda 7200.11 PCB

Order Online: Seagate 100466824 Barracuda 7200.11 PCB

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WD 2060-701590-000 PCB

Swap 2060-701590-000 WD PCB(Printed Circuit Boards) to recover your data from damaged HDD due to PCB failure. 2060-701590-000 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

2060-701590-000 WD PCB Board Details:

Board Number: 2060-701590-000
Main Controller IC: 88i8846-TFJ2
HDD Motor Combo IC: L7251 3.1
Manufacturer: Western Digital

Note: Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure.

Swap 2060-701590-000 WD PCB will not solve the problem below:

1. The hard drive will power up normally (no ticking noises, errors etc) but will not be recognized by the computer;
2. The hard drive will power up normally and be recognized correctly but will report a size of 0 bytes;
3. The hard drive will power up but report SMART errors on boot;

WD 2060-701590-000 PCB Photos:

WD 2060-701590-000 PCB

Order Online: Western Digital 2060-701590-000 PCB

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100466725 Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB

Swap 100466725 Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB(Printed Circuit Boards) to recover your data from damaged HDD due to PCB failure. 100466725 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

PCB Board Details:

Name: ST3500320AS
Board Number: 100466725
Main Controller IC: TTB5501C
Motor Combo IC: 100369972
Manufacturer: Seagate

Note: Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure.

Swap Seagate 100466725 Barracuda 11 PCB will not solve the problem below:

1. The hard drive will power up normally (no ticking noises, errors etc) but will not be recognized by the computer;
2. The hard drive will power up normally and be recognized correctly but will report a size of 0 bytes;
3. The hard drive will power up but report SMART errors on boot;

Seagate 100466725 Barracuda 11 PCB Photos:

100466725 Seagate Barracuda 11 PCB

Order Online: Seagate 100466725 Barracuda 11 PCB

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Types of Computer File Systems

Types of Computer File SystemsFile system types can be classified into disk file systems, network file systems and special purpose file systems.

1. Disk File Systems:

a) Disk file systems
A disk file system is a file system designed for the storage of files on a data storage device, most commonly a disk drive, which might be directly or indirectly connected to the computer. Examples of disk file systems include FAT (FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, exFAT), NTFS, HFS and HFS+, HPFS, UFS, ext2, ext3, ext4, btrfs, ISO 9660, ODS-5, Veritas File System, VMFS, ZFS, ReiserFS and UDF. Some disk file systems are journaling file systems or versioning file systems.

b) Optical discs
ISO 9660 and Universal Disk Format (UDF) are the two most common formats that target Compact Discs, DVDs and Blu-ray discs. Mount Rainier is a newer extension to UDF supported by Linux 2.6 series and Windows Vista that facilitates rewriting to DVDs in the same fashion as has been possible with floppy disks.

c) Flash file systems
A flash file system is a file system designed for storing files on flash memory devices. These are becoming more prevalent as the number of mobile devices is increasing, and the capacity of flash memories increase.

While a disk file system can be used on a flash device, this is suboptimal for several reasons:

a) Erasing blocks: Flash memory blocks have to be explicitly erased before they can be rewritten. The time taken to erase blocks can be significant, thus it is beneficial to erase unused blocks while the device is idle.
b) Random access: Disk file systems are optimized to avoid disk seeks whenever possible, due to the high cost of seeking. Flash memory devices impose no seek latency.
c) Wear levelling: Flash memory devices tend to wear out when a single block is repeatedly overwritten; flash file systems are designed to spread out writes evenly.

d) Tape file systems
A tape file system is a file system and tape format designed to store files on tape in a self-describing form. Magnetic tapes are sequential storage media with significantly longer random data access times than disks, posing challenges to the creation and efficient management of a general-purpose file system.

In a disk file system there is typically a master file directory, and a map of used and free data regions. Any file additions, changes, or removals require updating the directory and the used/free maps. Random access to data regions is measured in milliseconds so this system works well for disks.

However, tape requires linear motion to wind and unwind potentially very long reels of media, and this tape motion may take several seconds to several minutes to move the read/write head from one end of the tape to the other.

Consequently, a master file directory and usage map can extremely slow and inefficient with tape. Writing typically involves reading the block usage map to find free blocks for writing, updating the usage map and directory to add the data, and then advancing the tape to write the data in the correct spot. Each additional file write requires updating the map and directory and writing the data, which may take several seconds to occur for each file.

Tape file systems instead typically allow for the file directory to be spread across the tape intermixed with the data, referred to as streaming, so that time-consuming and repeated tape motions are not required to write new data.

However a side effect of this design is that reading the file directory of a tape usually requires scanning the entire tape to read all the scattered directory entries. Most data archiving software that works with tape storage will store a local copy of the tape catalog on a disk file system, so that adding files to a tape can be done quickly without having to rescan the tape media. The local tape catalog copy is usually discarded if not used for a specified period of time, at which point the tape must be re-scanned if it is to be used in the future.

IBM has developed a file system for tape called the Linear Tape File System. The IBM implementation of this file system has been released as the open-source IBM Linear Tape File System — Single Drive Edition (LTFS—SDE) product. The Linear Tape File System uses a separate partition on the tape to record the index meta-data thereby avoiding the problems associated with scattering directory entries across the entire tape.
Tape formatting

Writing data to a tape is often a significantly time-consuming process that may take several hours. Similarly, completely erasing or formatting a tape can also take several hours. With many data tape technologies it is not necessary to format the tape before over-writing new data to the tape. This is due to the inherently destructive nature of overwriting data on sequential media.

Because of the time it can take to format a tape, typically tapes are pre-formatted so that the tape user does not need to spend time preparing each new tape for use. All that is usually necessary is to write an identifying media label to the tape before use, and even this can be automatically written by software when a new tape is used for the first time.

e) Database file systems

A recent concept for file management is the idea of a database-based file system. Instead of, or in addition to, hierarchical structured management, files are identified by their characteristics, like type of file, topic, author, or similar metadata.

f) Shared disk file systems
A shared disk file system is one in which a number of machines (usually servers) all have access to the same external disk subsystem (usually a SAN). The file system arbitrates access to that subsystem, preventing write collisions. Examples include GFS from Red Hat, GPFS from IBM, and SFS from DataPlow.

2. Network file systems

A network file system is a file system that acts as a client for a remote file access protocol, providing access to files on a server. Examples of network file systems include clients for the NFS, AFS, SMB protocols, and file-system-like clients for FTP and WebDAV.

3. Special purpose file systems

A special purpose file system is basically any file system that is not a disk file system or network file system. This includes systems where the files are arranged dynamically by software, intended for such purposes as communication between computer processes or temporary file space.

Special purpose file systems are most commonly used by file-centric operating systems such as Unix. Examples include the procfs (/proc) file system used by some Unix variants, which grants access to information about processes and other operating system features.

Deep space science exploration craft, like Voyager I and II used digital tape-based special file systems. Most modern space exploration craft like Cassini-Huygens used Real-time operating system file systems or RTOS influenced file systems. The Mars Rovers are one such example of an RTOS file system, important in this case because they are implemented in flash memory.

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Windows-based Bootable Recovery CD/USB Flash Disk: Active Boot Disk

Windows-based Bootable Recovery CD/USB Flash Disk: Active Boot DiskWindows can’t start normally? Need to access your data or repair your computer?
Boot your computer from Active Boot Disk (LiveCD) and repair most of the problems by three steps easily:

1. Creat a Bootable Disk
It is ready to burn immediately to a CD, DVD, USB disk. Create a bootable disk right now after downloading. Download Active Boot Disk Now.

2. Boot Your Computer
Insert the boot disk and reboot the computer. Make sure that a boot section in BIOS is configured properly. BIOS setting guide.

3. Over 30 Utilities Included
When you boot up your computer, select from as many powerful tools as possible. Over 30 useful utilities are included: disk recovery, data recovery, smart disk diagnostic, password resetting, data erasure and network access tools in one bootable disk.

Active@ Boot Disk combines a number of powerful tools that let you: Recover lost data,Reset Windows passwords, Make computer system backups, Securely erase data.

Main utilities included:
2. Active@ Data CD/DVD Burner – Burner Utility
Active@ File Recovery – File & Folders Recovery Tool
Active@ Partition Recovery – Partition Restore Utility
Active@ Disk Image – Backup Disk Image
Active@ KillDisk – Erase & Destroy Data
Active@ Disk Monitor – Monitor & Control Disk Health
Active@ Password Changer – Recover & Reset Passwords
Active@ Partition Manager – Create, Format & Delete Partitions

OS Support:
Works with Windows Clients: NT, Win2000 Wks, XP, Vista, Windows 7
Works with Windows Servers : NT, 2000 Server, 2003, 2008

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How To Backup Data For All Series Of Western Digital Hard Drives?

How To Backup Data For All Series Of Western Digital Hard Drives?Keep a backup of your important data at all times! Backing up your data protects you in case of a computer virus, data corruption, hardware issues, or electrical problems.

Western digital is one of the most popular hard drive manufacturers. This article will give some tips on how to backup data on all series of these hard drives.

1. My Book 3.0, My Book AV DVR Expander, and My Passport AV:
These drives do not come with any backup software. You can manually copy and paste your data to the drive, use Windows Backup or Apple Time Machine if applicable, or you can use a third party backup software of your choice.

2. My Book Live, My Book Elite, My Book For Mac, My Book Studio, My Book Studio LX, My Book Essential, My Passport Elite, My Passport Essential SE, My Passport Essential, My Passport Studio, My Passport Essential SE, My Passport For Mac and My Passport SE For Mac:
These drives can use the WD SmartWare backup software that comes on the drive to backup your data from your internal hard drive. Please see the link below for step-by-step instructions on how to backup your data.

3. My Book Essential Edition 2.0, My Passport Essential Edition, My Passport Essential Edition SE and My Book Essential (Green Ring):
These drives do not come with any backup software. You can manually copy and paste your data to the drive, use Windows Backup or Apple Time Machine if applicable, or you can use a third party backup software of your choice.

4. My Book Mirror Edition, My Book Home Edition, My Book Studio Edition, My Book Studio Edition II, My Book Office Edition, My Book World Edition (White Light), My Book World Edition II (White Light), My Passport Studio Edition, My Passport Elite Edition, My Book World Edition (Blue Rings), My Book World Edition II (Blue Rings), and WD ShareSpace, drives:
These drives can use the WD Anywhere Backup software that come with them to backup your data from your internal hard drive. Please see link below for step-by-step instructions on how to backup your data.

5. My Book Premium Edition:
This drive came with WD Backup, which you can use to backup your pictures, videos, and other documents. Please see link below for step-by-step instructions on how to backup your data.

6. WD Elements Play , WD Elements Desktop , WD Elements Portable , WD Elements SE Portable, Elements Portable and Elements Desktop:
This drive does not come with any backup software. You can manually copy and paste your data to the drive, use Windows Backup or Apple Time Machine if applicable, or you can use a third party backup software of your choice.

7. My Book Premium ES:
This drive came with Retrospect HD 2.0 software that can backup your data from the internal hard drive. This software also supports a full system backup. Please see the link below for step-by-step instructions on how to backup your data.

8. WD Dual-Option Combo , WD Dual-Option USB, and WD Dual-Option Media Center :
If you have a WD Media Center, Dual-option Combo, or Dual-option USB external hard drive, you can use the Retrospect Express 6.5 software that comes with the drive to create a backup that will backup your data from the internal drive. This software also supports a full system backup.

9. WD TV Live Hub Media Center:
If you have a WD TV Live Hub Media Center, this drive includes a Network Hard Drive (NAS). WD does not recommend using this drive for backup purposes, and does not provide backup software with this unit.

10. Other External hard drives (that did not come with backup software):
If you want to backup only your data onto a second hard drive, please see links below for how you can use your operating system to store your data on an external drive for both Mac and PC.

Note:: Always remember that “backup” means that you have your data stored in at least two (2) locations. Moving data from your system drive to an external hard drive is not a backup, unless there is already a duplicate of the file on a different drive.

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