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"Hardware" on https://aligot-death.space, available at https://aligot-death.space/wiki/hardware-en

wiki/sysadmin

Hardware

Hardware tips and notes.

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Content

Storage#

Stuck head#

Diagnosis: "tick tick tick" and/or screeching noises when starting drive.

Either hit drive against a table (while unpowered) to unstuck: only do that with already fucked-up-to-be-backed-up drives.

(When I was a sysadmin, I heard a story of how old VAX drives would stall, so holes had been drilled in them with tape over the holes. When stalled, the sysadmin would peel back the tape and use their finger to spin-start them. Those even older drives must have been more tolerant of dust!)

More than once I had a hard drive fail to start up after a power cycle (back then the drives only spun down when power was removed). First thing we tried was to remove the drive and give the whole drive a sharp spin on the axis of the platter. Due to inertia of the platter, this would tend to get the platter to move a bit and "unstick" it.

My recollection is that it worked every time I had to do this. Of course, we would back up that drive and replace it as soon as possible.

Source

Connectors#

Power supply cords#

On power unit, ampere is a maximum (an equipement using less will be fine), while voltage is an exact value, with a tolerance of ≈10%

Plug "shape" is defined by IEC 60320

Diagram list of IEC 60320 power plugs

IEC 60320 norm as shown on Wikipedia

In-computer power connectors#

Power and Panel Cables and Connectors (archive)

Power supply labels on (mainly old) PSU connectors seems to have very little documentation. From here and here (archive), it seems to be:

label Corresponding equipement
P1 System board, 24-pin
P2 Diskette drive
P3 CPU power, 6-pin
P4 1st SATA hard drive
P5 2nd SATA hard drive
P7 Optical drive

Pc building#

PC Part picker

Seemingly dead computer#

If a computer no longer powers (typically, a laptop), unplug power supply, remove battery, then press and release power button for one second, 30 times, and put battery and power supply back. It will discharge static charges from capacitors, actually removing any leftover power, and might allow computer to come back online.

The Secret Thinkpad Powerbutton Code To Bring Dead Laptops Back To Life (Hacker News thread with more tips here)