UPDATE: JUMP TO "Severely Delayed Follow-up" MESSAGE (number 18?)
(NOTE: See follow up message "Western Digital Responds")
I greatly appreciate the help and advice I've recieved from this group. It is wonderful to hear from people about what works for them, as well as what doesn't.
This message falls in the later category.
I bought a Western Digital 200 Gb external firewire drive. After 7 weeks it simply quit working. I looked up the WD warranty policy and found that the only remedy is full replacement -- you send them the entire firewire drive and they send a new one. Any data on the drive you send in will be lost, even if the drive mechanism is good and the data is intact.
My drive was 80% full, and the stuff on it included my brother's wedding video. I had put a couple of dozen hours into editing (3 source cameras, suround sound, etc.) and I didn't want to lose all the data. So on the advice of a service tech where I bought the drive, I took the external case apart and removed the drive mechanism. I installed the drive mechanism in a generic firewire case (which I knew worked) but no joy. The drive made a horrible grinding noise and I knew it was all gone.
I put the external case back together, got an RMA number from Western Digital, and sent it to their repair facility. Then I went out and bought a second one, so I wouldn't have to wait for the replacement drive to get back. (It seemed like a good idea at the time.)
Three weeks later the first drive was returned without being repaired or replaced with a form letter indicating a reason code of "Tamper".
Here is where Western Digital goes out to lunch... While they do sell the very same drive mechanisms loose, and expect you to install it in your PC yourself, and they promise to replace the drives if they go bad -- they use a different policy for their firewire drives. If you pull the drive mechanism out of the plastic case on a firewire drive they void the warranty even though you haven't done anything to the drive mechanism you wouldn't have done if you had bought it loose. To me, installing and removing the drive mechanism from a PC is no different than removing and installing it from the firewire case. Same connectors, same pesky little screws, same jumpers, etc.
While I was still arguing with various levels of management at WD, my replacement hard drive failed! It was only 5 weeks old. This time the problem was not the disk mechanism. So I haven't lost any data yet on that one. I plan to buy a 3rd party drive case with a fan in it and move the disk mechanism to a new case and hope it hangs together until I can afford yet another disk of some sort as a backup device. The Western Digital external cases do not have fans, and they run very hot.
I am really upset with Western Digital's policy and the attitude of their service managers over this. It all boils down to this:
1) They'd rather save their service techs the time it takes to crack a firewire case open and check that the serial number on the drive mechanism matches the serial number on the outside of the firewire case. In order to save that 2 minutes of a technicians time, they expect all the customers to willingly give up any chance of saving any data that might still be readable on a drive mechanism inside a faulty external firewire case.
2) If you do crack open the external case on a firewire drive that still might have useful data on it, Western Digital will refuse to replace the mechanism inside, irrespective of the condition (not tampered) of the mechanism, your ability to prove where the fault is, or anything else.
Western Digital promised to fix my drive and didn't. They also promised to call me on at least two occasions and didn't.
After much discussion today, I've promised WD to tell my family, friends, and co-workers about my unacceptable experience with Western Digital and recommend to them than they not buy any Western Digital disk drive products. I intend to keep my promise.
So, my advice to my fellow Vegas users is this: If you decide to buy a firewire hard disk, save yourself a headache and don't buy anything from Western Digital.
Best Regards,
John Brawn.
(NOTE: See follow up message "Western Digital Responds")
I greatly appreciate the help and advice I've recieved from this group. It is wonderful to hear from people about what works for them, as well as what doesn't.
This message falls in the later category.
I bought a Western Digital 200 Gb external firewire drive. After 7 weeks it simply quit working. I looked up the WD warranty policy and found that the only remedy is full replacement -- you send them the entire firewire drive and they send a new one. Any data on the drive you send in will be lost, even if the drive mechanism is good and the data is intact.
My drive was 80% full, and the stuff on it included my brother's wedding video. I had put a couple of dozen hours into editing (3 source cameras, suround sound, etc.) and I didn't want to lose all the data. So on the advice of a service tech where I bought the drive, I took the external case apart and removed the drive mechanism. I installed the drive mechanism in a generic firewire case (which I knew worked) but no joy. The drive made a horrible grinding noise and I knew it was all gone.
I put the external case back together, got an RMA number from Western Digital, and sent it to their repair facility. Then I went out and bought a second one, so I wouldn't have to wait for the replacement drive to get back. (It seemed like a good idea at the time.)
Three weeks later the first drive was returned without being repaired or replaced with a form letter indicating a reason code of "Tamper".
Here is where Western Digital goes out to lunch... While they do sell the very same drive mechanisms loose, and expect you to install it in your PC yourself, and they promise to replace the drives if they go bad -- they use a different policy for their firewire drives. If you pull the drive mechanism out of the plastic case on a firewire drive they void the warranty even though you haven't done anything to the drive mechanism you wouldn't have done if you had bought it loose. To me, installing and removing the drive mechanism from a PC is no different than removing and installing it from the firewire case. Same connectors, same pesky little screws, same jumpers, etc.
While I was still arguing with various levels of management at WD, my replacement hard drive failed! It was only 5 weeks old. This time the problem was not the disk mechanism. So I haven't lost any data yet on that one. I plan to buy a 3rd party drive case with a fan in it and move the disk mechanism to a new case and hope it hangs together until I can afford yet another disk of some sort as a backup device. The Western Digital external cases do not have fans, and they run very hot.
I am really upset with Western Digital's policy and the attitude of their service managers over this. It all boils down to this:
1) They'd rather save their service techs the time it takes to crack a firewire case open and check that the serial number on the drive mechanism matches the serial number on the outside of the firewire case. In order to save that 2 minutes of a technicians time, they expect all the customers to willingly give up any chance of saving any data that might still be readable on a drive mechanism inside a faulty external firewire case.
2) If you do crack open the external case on a firewire drive that still might have useful data on it, Western Digital will refuse to replace the mechanism inside, irrespective of the condition (not tampered) of the mechanism, your ability to prove where the fault is, or anything else.
Western Digital promised to fix my drive and didn't. They also promised to call me on at least two occasions and didn't.
After much discussion today, I've promised WD to tell my family, friends, and co-workers about my unacceptable experience with Western Digital and recommend to them than they not buy any Western Digital disk drive products. I intend to keep my promise.
So, my advice to my fellow Vegas users is this: If you decide to buy a firewire hard disk, save yourself a headache and don't buy anything from Western Digital.
Best Regards,
John Brawn.