search for: 0wbrnom9kepc0uuhviidfz1

Displaying 2 results from an estimated 2 matches for "0wbrnom9kepc0uuhviidfz1".

2016 Jan 19
0
HDD badblocks
...g on the contacts and revealing the copper underneath. That's why you should never clean contacts with a pencil eraser, just re-seat the boards and they'll make contact again. Peter -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJWnYXFAAoJEAUijw0EjkDv+4EH/0wbRnoM9KePC0UUhViIdFZ1 cpaVvNqre+zVd6qBhnzbcPT+lXINHZ5Mm/Rw0tcBqx8nYzYab5qS5hTRaZOTm6H/ aXbH6shJC4o1LW/fGDkMZ0V8ZGgz4uN4cdMYN87rVqX+J477Igs3D4yO9Gxux6K7 Eqn3+kBECL5iBiFdOf86H0UoNZuUHkfMpj95R4AJnywTCqB5W1XaVQPViNs/ge16 5Ipk7uopfbREM+F60hI889XH3s0eUXabZsTUGJWE/nUd/sNCdnAqBVD3aTuwz6gv sb599qH8AAFX8pz0DloslLVQRb0pExbAHGM/IDM...
2016 Jan 18
2
HDD badblocks
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Not new: I can remember seeing DEC engineers cleaning up the contacts on memory boards for a VAX 11/782 with a pencil eraser c.1985. It's still a pretty standard first fix to reseat a card or connector. On 18/01/16 15:47, Matt Garman wrote: > That's strange, I expected the SMART test to show some issues. > Personally, I'm still