How to Clean your Hard Drive
It's really not too difficult to fix your own hard drive, if
the problem is a head crash, or the infamous Seagate
"stiction" problem, if you know what to do. You will
require #4/0 steel wool, Varsol, WD-40, a few hand tools, and
about 45 minutes.
First, you need a clean room, so make sure the garage door is
closed before you begin. Move those old lawnmower parts off the
bench.
Disassemble the sealed unit and carefully wash all parts with
Varsol. Bend the read/write heads out of the way and then
disassemble the platter stack.
VERY CAREFULLY buff the platter surfaces with the #4/0 steel
wool. This will remove any existing data, level out any surface
defects, and help to redistribute the magnetic media and fill in
those pesky "bad sectors" that most drives have.
Reassemble the platter stack, and using a .015" feeler
gauge, bend the read/write head back to the platter surface,
using the feeler gauge to set the gap. This is a slightly higher
gap than the factory uses, but it reduces the chance of head
collisions with any flotsam you neglected to remove.
Give the head and platters a good shot of WD-40 and reassemble
the unit. If your drive has a filter, replace it with a clean
section of gauze pad. All that's left is to low level and DOS
format the drive, and you're back in business.
I haven't tried this yet myself, but my friend's wife's
sister-in-law's husband knows a technician who does it all the
time.