Like many of you, I have a number of apparently failed, or irritatingly noisy small 50-pin SCSI drives (most 250mb or less). I have been going through them. Several of the ones I thought were dead have turned out just to need reformatting (Apple's utilities here were, however, useless; I used Silverlining v5.8.3a with much more success).
The more interesting thing to report is an experiment with a Quantum ProDrive LPS, 230MB. These were never particularly quiet drives, even back when new, but I had one of these that was whining badly, and so I regarded it as expendable. These drives shipped in 1992-93 machines like the later Quadras. Whining of the sort in question is caused by bearings, and as it's squeaky wheels that get the grease, I got out the oilcan....
A definitely dead drive was disassembled first to take a peek. That is something best not done to a drive you'd like to keep running. I discovered from the takeapart that it is possible to get oil down into the main bearing. Whether THAT is a good idea or not is, of course, another matter. Still, let's press on.
There are three stickers on these drives, each of which says, "Warranty Void If Seal Broken." Well, warranties are no longer an issue. The sticker to remove is the centre one. It has a small screw underneath, which, when removed, offers access down into the driveshaft. There is a lip and a seam (platters rotate around the shaft) separating this from the platters, so it looked possible to keep the oil where it belongs by using just a little and applying it carefully.
I removed the screw on the working, but whining drive and dipped a needle into some high quality machine oil a few times, inserting it down the hole into the driveshaft area. I then left the oil to soak in for a few minutes, and finally popped the drive in a Quadra 605.
I didn't expect this to work, somehow. However, the Quantum drive is no longer noisy. I am not sure how long it will continue to work, but I have been running it in a Silverlining testing loop for an hour, and it seems just fine.
I then tried the same thing with another of these drives that died a couple of years back. It was making a grinding noise. It started spinning, quietened down in about 90 seconds, and was actually recognized on the scsi chain. However, the heads were parked, and I could not get any further. I am not sure if other utilities like Lido would get me more joy.
Anyway, given the rate of drive failure these days, I thought I'd report this. It was only an experiment, but I'll try the drive again in a few days and see what happens.
The more interesting thing to report is an experiment with a Quantum ProDrive LPS, 230MB. These were never particularly quiet drives, even back when new, but I had one of these that was whining badly, and so I regarded it as expendable. These drives shipped in 1992-93 machines like the later Quadras. Whining of the sort in question is caused by bearings, and as it's squeaky wheels that get the grease, I got out the oilcan....
A definitely dead drive was disassembled first to take a peek. That is something best not done to a drive you'd like to keep running. I discovered from the takeapart that it is possible to get oil down into the main bearing. Whether THAT is a good idea or not is, of course, another matter. Still, let's press on.
There are three stickers on these drives, each of which says, "Warranty Void If Seal Broken." Well, warranties are no longer an issue. The sticker to remove is the centre one. It has a small screw underneath, which, when removed, offers access down into the driveshaft. There is a lip and a seam (platters rotate around the shaft) separating this from the platters, so it looked possible to keep the oil where it belongs by using just a little and applying it carefully.
I removed the screw on the working, but whining drive and dipped a needle into some high quality machine oil a few times, inserting it down the hole into the driveshaft area. I then left the oil to soak in for a few minutes, and finally popped the drive in a Quadra 605.
I didn't expect this to work, somehow. However, the Quantum drive is no longer noisy. I am not sure how long it will continue to work, but I have been running it in a Silverlining testing loop for an hour, and it seems just fine.
I then tried the same thing with another of these drives that died a couple of years back. It was making a grinding noise. It started spinning, quietened down in about 90 seconds, and was actually recognized on the scsi chain. However, the heads were parked, and I could not get any further. I am not sure if other utilities like Lido would get me more joy.
Anyway, given the rate of drive failure these days, I thought I'd report this. It was only an experiment, but I'll try the drive again in a few days and see what happens.



