My HDD is throwing a SMART error, so I want to be prepared for the RMA that I will eventually have to file.
Seagate's return policies look pretty strict, they don't specify that I need to buy this stuff, but they do specify that I need to find something very similar.
Go Here and look at the single Seagate Return Pack. It's just a box with some special foam cut-outs!
I have a Hitachi box with special foam that I got for buying this PATA drive. It was free after rebate (woot Fry's). The Seagate drive could easily fit in this box, and it would be very well cushioned and *should* meet their standards.
What should I do? I could risk shipping them my drive in the Hitachi box or some other similar box+foam package for cheaper, but then if it's not acceptable my warrantee is voided and I'll have to pay Seagate to have the drive shipped back to me. This drive is 6 months old, and a 5 year warranty would be a terrible thing to waste.
Curse you Seagate! I've always bought Seagate drives, and this is a fairly new 7200.8 Serial-150 drive. None of my other, much older drives are having any problems, but all of these fine print details in the Returns and Warrnty section are starting to really piss me off. Why is it so important that the drive be cushioned in this exact fashion? They already specify that a certain number of Gs (so any large dents) voids the warranty. Is it really necessary to have all of this extra padding to protect a dead drive? And why are they so specific on how exactly the drive must be sent? Isn't the Hitachi box+padding good enough? It's almost identical, but the box is slightly smaller (which doesn't matter for shipping one drive).
I have a spare computer that I'll be running until the replacement arrives, but losing 250 GB worth of storage is a pain. Where am I going to keep all of my pr0n???
Seagate's return policies look pretty strict, they don't specify that I need to buy this stuff, but they do specify that I need to find something very similar.
Go Here and look at the single Seagate Return Pack. It's just a box with some special foam cut-outs!
I have a Hitachi box with special foam that I got for buying this PATA drive. It was free after rebate (woot Fry's). The Seagate drive could easily fit in this box, and it would be very well cushioned and *should* meet their standards.
What should I do? I could risk shipping them my drive in the Hitachi box or some other similar box+foam package for cheaper, but then if it's not acceptable my warrantee is voided and I'll have to pay Seagate to have the drive shipped back to me. This drive is 6 months old, and a 5 year warranty would be a terrible thing to waste.
Curse you Seagate! I've always bought Seagate drives, and this is a fairly new 7200.8 Serial-150 drive. None of my other, much older drives are having any problems, but all of these fine print details in the Returns and Warrnty section are starting to really piss me off. Why is it so important that the drive be cushioned in this exact fashion? They already specify that a certain number of Gs (so any large dents) voids the warranty. Is it really necessary to have all of this extra padding to protect a dead drive? And why are they so specific on how exactly the drive must be sent? Isn't the Hitachi box+padding good enough? It's almost identical, but the box is slightly smaller (which doesn't matter for shipping one drive).
I have a spare computer that I'll be running until the replacement arrives, but losing 250 GB worth of storage is a pain. Where am I going to keep all of my pr0n???