These are some real problems experienced by Bigfoot TX and Quantum hard drives in general.
Upon starting just get a a repetitive tick-tock - pause - tick-tock noice, after some time the unit spins down. Unit was working and just gave this problem upon computer starting up one day. Powered unit in different positions, removed cover and saw head arm repeditly move from inner to outer of platters, no scrtaches, put in unit in freezer for 30min (had to try this), held onto heads arm while drive was running. Still no change.
Michael J.
Melbourne, Australia
Most common problem for Quantum drives is bad sectors. After some period of time magnetic media that covers the platters starts to degrade and magnetic domains can't be turned in a desired direction by writing element of the head. This is how bad sectors appear. When the drive starts reading data from such unreadable bad sector it could start freezing, scratching and sometimes even clicking: . This leads to further damage to the heads and surface, and may result in further data loss. As soon as you start experiencing such symptoms stop the drive immediately and send it to our data recovery lab for evaluation. Any further attempts would just add up to the problems. In our lab we use special imaging hardware tools that are capable of reading raw sector data ignoring checksum check. That's usually the only way to get as much data as possible from these LBAs.
Another quite common symptom Quantum drives have is clicking or knocking sound. The drive usually spins up, clicks a few times, spins faster, clicks again and spins down: . Most often this a sign of a bad head, but before doing any clean room work, it is very important to perform accurate diagnostics and eliminate a chance of possible firmware corruption that sometimes could also cause clicking.
The drive spins up. It isn't detected in the bios. Every 5-10 seconds there is a clunking sound that vibrates the whole drive. I tried freezing the hard drive but this didn't help. The problem remains unchanged.
M.Mozart
Vienna, Austria
Quantum hard drives are also well-known for their firmware problems. If one of the firmware modules becomes corrupted, the drive fails to initialize correctly and stops working making the data inaccessible. In such case the drive is either
not found in BIOS at all
shows up with wrong S/N or capacity,
or fail to read any data or boot up operating system.
If you attempt to boot up from such drive or read any data from it you would get "Primary Master Hard Disk Fail" or "No operating system found" or "USB Device malfunctioned" error or something similar.
If you experience any of the symptoms described above with your Quantum Bigfoot TX please feel free to contact us to get upfront quote on data recovery from your failed drive.
If you hear your Quantum Bigfoot TX hard drive making some other unusual noises visit our Hard Drive Sounds page for more details.
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