Deunan wrote on 2025-02-24, 18:38:
I didn't get very far with MFM drives either. Or anything early SCSI or IDE that's based on MFM/RLL tech. Even those drives usually have the bearing either inaccessible (unless you open it and remove the platters - NOT recommended)...
I've had a bit of luck using a fine Teflon based lubricant - you used to be able to get a tiny tube of it
a "Radio Shack" and I still have a couple...
A lot depends on how accessible the bearing is ... if it is, sometimes you have to
remove a circuit board and/or a sticker/dust cover .. but if you can find the end of
the spindle, a small amount of lubricant, let sit for a day, a small amount more..
then run the drive for a few days upside down (assuming the spindle end is on the
bottom - the idea being to use gravity to help a little to draw the lubricant into the
bearing).
No idea how "real" this technique is, but it's what I did on a couple occasions where
the drive did actually improve...
On the subject of "opening" drives -- many years ago I had a much older (but small capacity
drive - so internal parts would have been bigger) that developed "stiction" ... it just wouldn't
spin up sometimes ... over time it got a bit worse, and I kept it loose but connected just outside
the system.. I could often make it work by rotating it back and forth about the vertical axis a
few times...
Eventually it got so bad that it was unusable ... I decided "hey this thing is trash anyway -
why not open it and see what it's inside" - which I did - the head was suck in place... it
took surprising little force to free it, and you could see a "spot" on the platter where it has
stuck .. still in the "it trash anyway" mindset, I polished the platter, put it back together
and wanted to see "how bad my damage would affect it".
Very surprisingly - it spun up, I didn't hear anything crunching on the platter/head, so
I tried formatting it - which worked! - and I used that drive in a very non-critical role
for a couple more years ... but just to be clear, I DON'T RECOMMEND DISMANTLING
A DRIVE - I'm sure newer drives with far smaller construction inside would have no chance
of surviving!
Dave ::: https://dunfield.themindfactory.com ::: "Daves Old Computers"->Personal
Dave ::: https://dunfield.themindfactory.com ::: "Daves Old Computers"->Personal