So which one of your said that there was no problem?
So which one of your said that there was no problem?
Asus Z9PE-D8 WS with 64GB of registered ECC ram.|Dell 30" LCD 3008wfp:7970 video card
LSI series raid controller
SSDs: Crucial C300 256GB
Standard drives: Seagate ST32000641AS & WD 1TB black
OSes: Linux and Windows x64
.:: Gaming PC Specs ::.
Case: Antec Nine Hundred
CPU: Intel Core i7-2600K @ 4.6 GHz, 1.44v (cooled by Xigmatek GAIA) [IntelBurnTest{Linpack} stable]
GPU/Monitor: VisionTek HD 6950 @ 6970, 950 MHz/1375 MHz 1.30v + Sony BRAVIA 32EX400 1080p
Motherboard: GIGABYTE Z68XP-UD4 F5
Memory: 16 GB (4x 4 GB) Corsair Vengeance LP DDR3 1600
Hard Drive: 2x Seagate 500 GB 7200.11 RAID 0 & RAID 1 (Matrix RAID) + 1x WD Caviar Black 640 GB
Sound: Creative SB X-Fi Fatal1ty Profess1onal, Logitech X-530
PSU: Corsair AX-1200 (1500W PSU!)
O/S: Microsoft® Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 X64
Apparently Seagate is only recovering data for free on drives manufactured in December, regardless of whether your drive bricked from the original firmware problem or not.
.:: Gaming PC Specs ::.
Case: Antec Nine Hundred
CPU: Intel Core i7-2600K @ 4.6 GHz, 1.44v (cooled by Xigmatek GAIA) [IntelBurnTest{Linpack} stable]
GPU/Monitor: VisionTek HD 6950 @ 6970, 950 MHz/1375 MHz 1.30v + Sony BRAVIA 32EX400 1080p
Motherboard: GIGABYTE Z68XP-UD4 F5
Memory: 16 GB (4x 4 GB) Corsair Vengeance LP DDR3 1600
Hard Drive: 2x Seagate 500 GB 7200.11 RAID 0 & RAID 1 (Matrix RAID) + 1x WD Caviar Black 640 GB
Sound: Creative SB X-Fi Fatal1ty Profess1onal, Logitech X-530
PSU: Corsair AX-1200 (1500W PSU!)
O/S: Microsoft® Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 X64
I just checked my seagate 500GB drive. Luckily it's older model, ST3500320NS Barracuda ES.2. But, this drives firmware had bugs too. When used in NAS's, there was some sort of spindown bug. But the guys at Infrant hooked me up with a beta bios for it. So far no problems. *knocks on wood*
Desktop
[Asus Rampage III Gene] [i7 920 D0] [12GB OCZ3B2000C9LV6GK] [HIS HD 5970] [SeaSonic X750 Gold ] [Windows 7 (64bit)] [OCZ Vertex 30GB x3 Raid0] [Koolance CPU 360] [XSPC Razer 5970] [TFC 360 rad, D5 w/ Koolance RP-450X2]
HTPC
[Origen AE S10V] [MSI H57M-ED65] [ i5-661 w/ Scythe Big Shuriken] [Kingston HyperX LoVo 4GB ] [ SeaSonic X650 Gold ] [ OCZ Vertex 30GB SSD ] [ SAMSUNG Spinpoint 640GB 7200 RPM 2.5"][Panasonic UJ-225 Blu-ray Slot Burner] [ Ceton InfiniTV4]
Ive got a seagate 7200.10 AAK firmware...even to this day (close to a year and a half later) it still doesnt think the drive has more then 200 days use on it, and the read/write speeds are continually getting lower and lower, its slower than the hitachi 500GB I have in a vantec external over eSATA, and the seagate is set to SATA2, I think that once I re-delegate this computer to upstairs, it'll get replaced with my spare 500GB hitachi
Current System:
eVGA 680i SLi "A2" P30 BIOS
intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 (currently at stock)
OCZ ReaperX 4GB DDR2 1000 (running at DDR2 800 Speeds with cas4)
320GB Seagate 7200.10
XFX 8800GT XXX 512MB (stock clocks)
auzentech X-Fi Prelude
PC Power and Cooling Silencer 750 Quad Copper
Win XP Pro
Can someone confirm about problems on 320gb 7200.11 drives?
I've got one but luckily (??) it has firmware SD22.
Project ZEUS II
Asus Rampage II Extreme
Intel I7 920 D0 3930A @ 4.50GHz (21 X 214mhz)
3 x 2GB G.Skill Trident 1600 @ 1716MHz (6-8-6-20-1N)
2 x Asus HD 6870 CrossFire @ 1000/1100MHz
OCZ Vertex 2 60GB | Intel X25-M 120GB | WD Velociraptor 150GB | Seagate FreeAgent XTreme 1.5TB esata
Asus Xonar DX | Logitech Z-5500 | LG W2600HP 26" S-IPS LCD
Watercooling setup:
1st loop -> Radiator: 2 x ThermoChill PA120.3 | Pump: Laing DDC-3.25 with Alphacool HF 38 top | CPU: Swiftech Apogee XT | Chipset: Swiftech MCW-NBMAX | Tubing: Masterkleer 1/2" UV
2nd loop -> Radiator: ThermoChill PA120.3 | Pump: Laing DDC-3.2 with Alphacool HF 38 top | GPU: 2 x EK FC-6870 | Tubing: Masterkleer 1/2" UV
Assembled in Mountain Mods Ascension Trinity
Powered by Corsair Professional Series Gold AX1200
Damn been using Seagate for years and just last year I nabbed a 640Gig WD and love it as well. Guess Seagate is out, and in with WD.
Lets see my list so far of where I went for drives....
Maxtor -> Seagate -> WD
Least I've been lucky so far and have purchased drives before the issues start happening.
-=The Gamer=-
MSI Z68A-GD65 (G3) | i5 2500k @ 4.5Ghz | 1.3875V | 28C Idle / 65C Load (LinX)
8Gig G.Skill Ripjaw PC3-12800 9-9-9-24 @ 1600Mhz w/ 1.5V | TR Ultra eXtreme 120 w/ 2 Fans
Sapphire 7950 VaporX 1150/1500 w/ 1.2V/1.5V | 32C Idle / 64C Load | 2x 128Gig Crucial M4 SSD's
BitFenix Shinobi Window Case | SilverStone DA750 | Dell 2405FPW 24" Screen
-=The Server=-
Synology DS1511+ | Dual Core 1.8Ghz CPU | 30C Idle / 38C Load
3 Gig PC2-6400 | 3x Samsung F4 2TB Raid5 | 2x Samsung F4 2TB
Heat
Does this effect 7200.12 at all? I have two of those that just went into a customer system. I tested them so as long as the user doesn't update firmware (he won't) all should be fine, but I'd still like to know.
Looks like they shouldn't have cut some of those jobs...
Case: Coolermaster CM690 OS: Windows XP x64 edition / Windows Vista x64 Optical: Asus DRW-1814BLT, LG GDR8164B Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-P35-DS3 (rev 2.1) Monitors: Dual GDM-5410 21" RAM: Corsair XMS2 4GB (2 x 2GB) DDR2 800, 5-4-3-12 Processor: E2140 (M0) @ 3.2ghz/1.3825v (set in BIOS) PSU: Enermax EG565P-VE FMA (24P) 535W ATX2.01 PSU Videocard: Galaxy 512mb 8800GT @ 675/1674/1100 (Samsung 1.0ns) Cooling: Xigmatek HDT-S1283, Accelero S1 Rev. 2 + 2x 120mm Coolermaster fan Storage: Western Digital Raptor 74gb (WD740GD-00FLA2), Seagate 750gb (ST3750630AS)
trusty drives are under 500gb![]()
we going shh around the corner
"the true story behind the scenes" by Seagate's employee
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=...3&cid=26542735I work for Seagate. I was there when the fit hit the shan, and I saw everything going in internally, as well as externally.
I really love my job, so please excuse the sock-puppet nature that creating a brand new account and claiming to be an authority on the subject I must seem to be. But I am a geek, and I really think you all need to know the true story behind the scenes.
This whole thing started with the 1.5 Terabyte drives. It had a stuttering issue, which at first we all thought was a simple bad implementation of SATA on common chipsets. Seagate engineers promptly jumped in and worked to try to duplicate the issue and prove where the problem was. This wasn't a massive rush as 1.5tb drives are what? 5% of the drives on the market. When it became obvious that the issue was more widespread, they buckled down and put out a couple of firmware revisions to fix it.........
Seagate promises second fault fix in 24 hours
http://www.channelregister.co.uk/200...ond_fault_fix/This will be firmware to fix the firmware (SD1A) that was issued to fix the firmware (SD15) that caused some 1TB Barracuda 7200.11 drives and others to stop working. The SD1A firmware caused 500GB Barracuda 7200.11s to stop working.............
Last edited by onethreehill; 01-21-2009 at 06:16 PM.
God dammit, my drives better not fail.
CPU:Q6600 G0 @ 3.825
Motherboard:Asus P5E X38
Memory:2x2GB OCZ Reapers DDR2 1066
Graphics Card:Asus 4850
Hard Drive:2xSegate 500gb 32MB Cache raid0
Power Supply:Xion 800W
Case:3DAurora
CPU cooling: D-tek Fuzion V2 (Quad insert removed)
GPU cooling: mcw60
Monitor:24" LG
So thats what happened to my ST31000340AS, I thought it just failed due to overclocking.
--lapped Q9650 #L828A446 @ 4.608, 1.45V bios, 1.425V load.
-- NH-D14 2x Delta AFB1212SHE push/pull and 110 cfm fan -- Coollaboratory Liquid PRO
-- Gigabyte EP45-UD3P ( F10 ) - G.Skill 4x2Gb 9600 PI @ 1221 5-5-5-15, PL8, 2.1V
- GTX 480 ( 875/1750/928)
- HAF 932 - Antec TPQ 1200 -- Crucial C300 128Gbboot --
Primary Monitor - Samsung T260
That's a relief, in a way. Thanks for the link. According to the information in the link, it is a very slim chance of failure in the first place (assuming you aren't reflashing anything). My drive fell into Seagates "affected" list, but it runs 24/7, so I guess that greatly reduces the risk.
For anyone that is interested in exactly WHAT is happening;
The conditions have to be just right - you have to reboot just after the drive writes the 320th log file to the firmware space of the drive. this is a log file that's written only occasionally, usually when there are bad sectors, missed writes, etc... might happen every few days on a computer in a nin-RAID home use situation.. and if that log file is written even one time after the magic #320, it rolls over the oldest file kept on the drive and there's no issue. It'll only stop responding IF the drive is powered up with log file #320 being the latest one written... a perfect storm situation. IF this is the case, then seagate is trying to put in place a procedure where you can simply ship them the drive, they hook it up to a serial controller, and re-flashed with the fixed firmware. That's all it takes to restore the drive to operation! As for buying new drives, that's up to you. None of the CC firmware drives were affected - only the SD firmware drives.
http://tech.yahoo.com/news/pcworld/2...okenharddrives- Seagate has now released new firmware for all models of hard drives affected by a software flaw, the company said Thursday.
Seagate has published detailed instructions for how administrators can identify the model of hard drive in service and whether it needs a firmware upgrade. Models affected are the Barracuda 7200.11, ES.2 SATA and DiamondMax 22.
The problem caused some drives to become completely inoperable, while other users found they could not access data on the drives. The new firmware will not fix drives that have become inoperable, the company said.
Seagate is offering customers whose drives are broken data recovery services from its i365 subsidiary. Data on drives that are not inoperable is still on the drives and can be recovered, the company said.
Seagate released new firmware last Friday for the Barracuda 7200.11 drives, but that upgrade was also faulty. Seagate withdrew it on Monday, said company spokesman Ian D. O'Leary.
It was originally thought that drives in the SV35 series, which are designed for surveillance applications, were also affected by the problems, but that now appears not to be the case, O'Leary said.
Seagate said it believes that vast majority of customers using the drives will not have problems. However, the company has not released figures on how many of the drives have been sold and what percentage may be affected.
"We regret any inconvenience that the firmware issues have caused our customers," according to a statement released Thursday.
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