Previously Peter Lu <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> I bought a WD2500BEVE drive (Western Digital 250GB 2.5"
> IDE) to upgrade my Dell laptop and somehow in the process
> of partitioning, formatting and Windows OS migration, its
> geometry got corrupted and instead of being a 250GB drive,
> it is now a 78GB drive. The corruption is on the drive
> itself, as the 78GB shows in PC BIOS, with Knoppix Linux,
> when the drive is put in a USB enclosure, and in WD's
> Data Lifeguard Diagnostics. Other people have
> successfully installed this drive on the model of my
> laptop, so IDE controller features such as 48-bit
> addressing should not be any issue.
> WD DLG Diagnostics shows the CHS as 152139/16/63 when the
> drive should be about 484402/16/63. I contacted WD
> support and the rep says it can't be fixed via software
> and must be RMA'ed. The WD DLG tools don't have any
> abilities to change/correct the CHS configuration.
> Does anyone know of any utilities that could do some
> low-level geometry fixing on these WD drives? Can
> anyone explain how a 250GB drive could have been
> corrupted into a 78GB drive via software and not be
> able to be reverted via software? I saw somewhere
> that these drives have many layers of fancy geometry
> translations and it's likely the same hardware
> could be programmed to be different devices (drive
> sizes, features, etc.), which would make sense that
> WD does not release the software to do hardware
> "configuration."
> My drive will get replaced, so hopefully the
> corruption won't occur again. Perhaps the drive I
> have is indeed defective or arrears on firmware.
> But my curiosity is aroused, and I'd really like
> to understand what's under the covers.
> Thanks for any help.
It is likely not corruption. Some manufacturers (all?)
include the possibility to down-configure drive capacities.
This is done for business reasons, e.g. when manufacturing
a separate 40GB drive configuration is more expensive
than manufacuring all 80GB and just selling some a 40GB
and others as 80GB. The reason is that even selling the
same drive at a lower price can still turn a profit
and gets the customer to buy your product, instead the
cheaper 40GB drive form somebody else. Just dropping the
price of the 80GB model down to the one of the 40GB
model is also not an option, since then you decrease
the profit on the 80GB model by too much.
One of the ugly sides of capitalism, that sometimes
degrading the quality of a product at additional
cost (implementing the limiter-feature costs money....)
makes business sense.
Of course the drive manufacturers doe emphatically not
want people to be able to reverse the limiting process.
One question: Are you sure this drive came to you with
full capacity? You should not be able to modify
the limit yourself, unless it is very shoddily
implemented, which would be a reason to stay away from WD.
After all if repartitioning can cause you to need
professional data recovery, the product clearly is a
health hazard...
Arno
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