Re: Unlock the seagate with PC3000 "Akim13" wrote in message news:Akim13.33ifab@no.email.invalid...
>
> Password protection
> Whatever the cause of password protection may be, in the end you
> will
> have to disable the password to restore
> access to user data. U5, Barracuda II-V, Barracuda 7200.7, Momentus,
> and U Series 7 drives hold password information
> in one of the sectors occupied by Vendor track (see the table
> below).
> To remove the password, it will be sufficient to
> write zeros to two first bytes of the sector. That can be
> accomplished
> using the "View service data objects" wizard. To
> do so, select the PCHS tab and highlight the Vendor track and
> necessary
> sector in it (see the table below), specify length
> of 1 sector and write zeroes to the first two bytes. Then write the
> sector back to disk. After that you will have to toggle
> power supply off/on.
>
> *What must be done after ?*
So are you saying that after removing the firmware password on the
hard disk that you still cannot read from that hard disk? If you are
trying to hack into someone else's hard disk, maybe they used
whole-disk or partition-level encryption. That means the MBR's
bootstrap record got replaced with a decrypting program but for which
you need to supply the password. Without that password, you won't be
able to decrypt the contents of the partitions on the hard disk.
Besides partition encryption that uses the MBR bootstrap with
password, another protection mechanism is Vista's BitLocker scheme
that relies on a TPM chip and BIOS to help with the encryption of the
partitions and unlocking the password saved in the hard disk's
firmware or in a vendor track on the hard disk won't get around that
encryption.
From the description you provided above (which was probably from the
manual), changing the 2 bytes to all zeroes is all you do. There is
no "after". You're done after writing zero to those 2 bytes. Again,
the forums mentioned are more focused on this particular PC3000
product and how to replace firmware or disable passwords on hard
disks.
It looks like you have the information to remove the password stored
in the hard disk itself. So what MORE are you looking for to get at
the contents on that hard disk? |