

- #MY EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE IS NOT WORKING PROPERLY PC#
- #MY EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE IS NOT WORKING PROPERLY FREE#
If you can hear a rhythmic "click" in time with the movement, the chances are that the drive heads are free on their mounts and are not jammed.Can you hear head movement now? If yes, re-attach the drive to your computer, and try accessing the drive. If anything was still alive on your hard drive, it would now be totally and finally dead. This is drastic of course but may help free the heads from any binding. If needed, reheat the device and, while holding the drive in one hand, sharply spin and hit the drive on a hard surface.If all seems well so far, try to access the drive, and move your data onto a good drive. However, if there is a difference, reattach the drive to your computer and listen for spin-up of the drive and normal clicking that indicates head activity. If you still can't hear any noises, go on to the next step.


You can ground yourself by either wearing an anti-static wrist band or by touching something grounded and metal. Do not touch the metal leads on the new board-static discharge could blow your new board before it ever has a chance to breathe new life into your drive. Slide out the old drive and replace it with the new one.When it arrives, remove the old board (there are five tiny screws to remove-don't lose them!).If you want to replace the PCB, search on Google for replacement parts for your drive's make and model.If you see this, you can breathe a little sigh of relief, for it means that is your likely culprit-and often, this is a problem that can be fixed with relative ease. Look for signs of damage-burns or scorch marks.If there's a power surge or a component failure on that board, your drive will stop working, but only because it doesn't know what to do next.
#MY EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE IS NOT WORKING PROPERLY PC#
Sometimes, it's not the drive that's dead, but the PC board that controls its operation (on the underside of the drive).
