hddmania Deadharddrive regular +1
Joined: 13 Jul 2009 Posts: 29 Location: Colorado
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Posted: Thu Aug 20, 2009 3:29 am Post subject: Buying PCB |
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Hey,
I am one of the many who sent you the offers. I would say go with your feeling and try to stay as local as you can. However, everyone will be selling the PCB "AS IS" since there is not much way to warranty them because the misapplication of the working PCB will kill the PCB or if you don't know how to make the replacement PCB works, customers will complain that they received a dead PCB.
Stay far away from the shipping option without any tracking.
Stay away from the one that will not warn you of a possibility that the replacement PCB may not work on your hard drive without some type of adaptive data manipulation.
Some businesses will sell you 1 PCB but will mix in 2 others that for sure will not work on your drive. You'll receive 3 PCBs with a pre-paid return postage. Seller will know which PCB will function on the customer's drive but will not tell you which one, so when the customer files an untruthful complaint, they are busted. (I don't sell PCBs like this but this is a good business model for the seller to protect themselves.)
Go with a seller who will provide you a DOA warranty. Most of us here in the US will provide you with a DOA Replacement Warranty but NO Refund. Some oversea sellers will not give you a DOA warranty!!!
Google their ebay or e-mail address to see if there is any complaints against them. Ask for the references if you don't feel comfortable with the seller.
You'll get what you paid for on a replacement PCBs. A good working PCB is not cheap. It takes time to test, take it off from a working drive and package. When you take the PCBs off of the hard drive, that drive is out of commissioin. So expect to pay about the same as the new drive. |
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