I feel bad for anyone that threw out or destroyed their drives in frustration after the initial firmware release.
I feel bad for anyone that threw out or destroyed their drives in frustration after the initial firmware release.
For my part I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of the stars makes me dream.
.
.
I need to flash mine but have no blank CD-Rs. Will the flash work from a USB stick?
ASUS P5E X38 (RF 0701 Bios) Q9550@3.51 1.248v, Xigmatek S1283, 8GB GSkill DDR2-8000@990 1.94v, XFX HD5870,
2 - Seagate 7200.10 320G RAID0, Seagate 7200.11 500G, Seagate 7200.12 1.5TB
Lian-Li (Rocketfish) Full Tower, Silverstone Zeus 750Watt, Vista Ultimate x64 SP1, Dell U2410
And why would anybody trust this firmware patch now? I think they are beyond the level of trust for people to flash their drives now. I think they should take them back and flash them and test them to make sure they are functioning and send them back.
If I was sitting on one of thesed rives now, there is no way I'd risk flashing. They didn't test the last one, so how do we know they tested this one? If they had properly tested these drives to begin with they would've never needed flashing.
I have always liked Seagate, and Western Disgital Drives, but I'm still floored over that last blunder.
.:: 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
dangit i have this power on problem, im so happy i didnt updated the firmware before.Got the SD15 Firmware. Now imma little scared we need some guinea pigs to test it out!
Last edited by safan80; 01-22-2009 at 06:37 PM.
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
I think I'll still stick with Seagate after this fiasco, at least unless my two 7200.11's really die within the next year.
It basically boils down to I haven't had a Seagate fail on me in at least 10+ years but I'm definitely going to be watching for any odd trends.
Work Rig: Asus x58 P6T Deluxe, i7 950 24x166 1.275v, BIX2/GTZ/D5
3x2048 GSkill pi Black DDR3 1600, Quadro 600
PCPower & Cooling Silencer 750, CM Stacker 810
Game Rig: Asus x58 P6T, i7 970 24x160 1.2v HT on, TRUE120
3x4096 GSkill DDR3 1600, PNY 660ti
PCPower & Cooling Silencer 750, CM Stacker 830
AMD Rig: Biostar TA790GX A2+, x4 940 16x200, stock hsf
2x2gb Patriot DDR2 800, PowerColor 4850
Corsair VX450
ok done the update...no problems (for now)...
And some people are talking about disable AHCI mode to a safe upgrade...is this true, i did on AHCI
I am still using the stock firmware .. I don't see any problem yet .. I am wondering if I should update the firmware
ASUS P5K PREMIUM
INTEL Q6600 @3.7Ghz, Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme, Silverstone FM 123
Crucial Ballistix PC6400 @578Mhz 2*2Gb, 5-5-5-15 T2
XFX XXX 8800 GTX 650/1550/2000
2x Seagate 7200.11 500Gb RAID 0
PC Power & Colling Silencer 750Watt
Because if the firmware was faulty, it would brick the drive instantly? Any potential read/write problem would show within hours, if not minutes after power up.
Anyways, seagate has already shown that even faulty firmware can't kill the drive. Just reflash it with the new firmware and good as new. After what happened with the original firmware, they weren't gonna let it happen again.
Last edited by [XC] Lead Head; 01-22-2009 at 06:58 PM.
Fold for XS!
You know you want to
If it's not too terribly expensive per GB I wouldn't mind getting one of those ina couple months either. I'd like either a 1 or 2TB fast drive. I wish they made them a bit faster. I know they are basically storage drives, but I still like the speed. I'd like to see a rather large cache. It doesn't have to be friggen huge, but maybe 16MB or so would be nice. Maybe a Black edition type of drive. Aw, WD of course.
After a year or so I might look at Seagate again. I have nothing against Seagate other than lack of trust right now. It's not personal. It's just too big of a blunder. I have to be able to trust a company when it comes to data storage like this. I have too much time invested to risk that kind of a loss. Those are mistake you cannot make when you deal with people's data. That was totally uncalled for and they know better. This is a top HDD company. They know better than that.
does this new FW fix the 1.5TB? It all 'seemed' to start with the 1.5TB - thats when I first got wind of trouble with Seagate anyway
how exactly does one flash? I have a so-called affected drive and want to flash before it goes wanky
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
Seems like a lot of people got strange warnings running some programs (including myself):
Linux:
Code:[ 79.472286] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 79.472293] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 79.814275] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 79.814281] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 79.977564] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 79.977569] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 80.218199] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 80.218206] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 80.372146] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 80.372150] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 80.517447] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 80.517451] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 80.662713] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 80.662717] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 80.916449] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 80.916454] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404 [ 81.061494] end_request: I/O error, dev sr0, sector 3232 [ 81.061498] Buffer I/O error on device sr0, logical block 404
I can't test those, I'm running my HDDs in RAID 0.
.:: 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
The boot time is slower on me with this SD1A, especially on grub load...with SD15 it took like some milliseconds to find my operating systems, now its up to one, two seconds... Well, I hope they release another update
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
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