Q: Flashing Apple Logo, 4th gen clickwheel
Dug out my old fourth-gen clickwheel iPod, A1059 is the model number, I think. I've thought about paying to get the iPod refurbished, but not if it means replacing every part of it but the case and the display (they're both pretty good).
I figured the battery would be shot, but I put it on the original FireWire charger for a few hours. It shows the Apple logo on the screen. I tried to do a reset as described in the support docs here online, but now the Apple logo will display for six to eight seconds, the screen will go blank for a second and then the Apple logo is displayed again. This cycle has continued for an hour or so.
I'm assuming that, since the Apple logo is displaying, there is something that has caused the iPod to be stuck in an endless loop of resetting. Would this more likely be the result of a bad hard drive or of a bad "motherboard"?
Thoughts?
4th-generation mono iPod
Posted on Aug 24, 2016 11:12 AM
A hard drive that is becoming unreliable (but has not completely failed) may do that... But it seems like you would also see a problem when doing a Restore followed by a complete sync. And you were able to successfully Restore and sync the iPod.
You can use Disk Utility to check the iPod's drive. Connect iPod and run Disk Utility, with iTunes not running. If the iPod does not appear in Disk Utility's sidebar, you may need to Enable disk use, or restart it into Disk Mode
How to put your iPod into disk mode - Apple Support
In Disk Utility, select iPod device in sidebar (not the volume indented below device). Click First Aid. Then, select the iPod's volume in sidebar, and click First Aid. See if any errors are reported.
NOTE: If your version of OS X is older, use the Repair Disk button on First Aid tab.
You can also try doing an Erase using Disk Utility to completely initialize the iPod's hard drive. Select iPod device (not the volume) in sidebar, and click Erase. You want to use these settings.
Name - (does not matter)
Format - OS X Extended (Journaled)
Scheme - Apple Partition Map
NOTE: If your version of OS X is older, please post back.
After the Erase completes, quit Disk Utility and run iTunes. Because the iPod's hard drive is completely erased, you must do a Restore using iTunes (whether you are prompted or not). After the Restore, sync iPod again. You may want to only sync a few dozen songs initially, as a test.
If the hard drive is shown to be faulty, you can consider replacing it with commonly available flash-based storage, such as compact flash or SD card. My old 4th gen iPod has a 64GB compact flash card (on an adapter).
Posted on Aug 26, 2016 5:35 PM
