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Firmware update and SATA II hard drive

Has anybody had any problems with new MacBook Pro after yesterday's firmware update with third party hard drive? I got a MacBook Pro 13" recently, swapped the 320 GB hard drive from my old MacBook. After reinstalling the OS for new hardware drivers, everything was working fine.

After the firmware update yesterday, the machine has started freezing randomly; the spinner comes up sometimes when reading or writing to the drive. The hard drive, a WD Scorpio Blue, supports SATA II. My suspicion is that there are intermittent data errors when using the SATA 3 Gbps interface. It could be an incompatibility between the controller and drive or the ribbon cable isn't good enough for newer SATA.

Does anybody know of a way to force the drive or the controller to use SATA 1.5 Gbps? Can I revert to the old firmware?

MacBook Pro 13", Mac OS X (10.5.7)

Posted on Jun 23, 2009 10:08 AM

Reply
1,980 replies

Jul 8, 2009 6:02 PM in response to Kevin222

Took mine in,the exchange was a breeze, took two minutes, just got it home, opened the box and there are five fingernail deep scratches across the white apple, opened the lid, there's a deep scratch on the keypad, closed it, called apple 1 second later, got a case number, have to exchange it again tomorrow, intolerable quality control defects on a $1200 Mac.

Jul 8, 2009 7:37 PM in response to slechtewolf

I followed this thread with great interest but having already ordered the hard drives I went ahead and upgraded anyway. I should mention I am new to the MBP, so I had nothing to back up etc. I just put in the new memory and the new HD and did a fresh install of OSX.

I do not seem to be getting any beachballing issues. I installed EFI 1.7 prior to exchanging the HD. It's a Western Digitial Scorpio Blue 500GB. Are there any specific applications I should run to check the stalling you guys have been experiencing? Normal browsing and usual office tasks have posed no problems for the past few hours.

Please advise.

Here are the details:

NVidia MCP79 AHCI:

Vendor: NVidia
Product: MCP79 AHCI
Speed: 3 Gigabit
Description: AHCI Version 1.20 Supported

WDC WD5000BEVT-00A03T0:

Capacity: 465.76 GB
Model: WDC WD5000BEVT-00A03T0
Revision: 01.01A01
Serial Number: *************
Native Command Queuing: Yes
Queue Depth: 32
Removable Media: No
Detachable Drive: No
BSD Name: disk0
Mac OS 9 Drivers: No
Partition Map Type: GPT (GUID Partition Table)
S.M.A.R.T. status: Verified
Volumes:
Mac HD:
Capacity: 465.44 GB
Available: 440.72 GB
Writable: Yes
File System: Journaled HFS+
BSD Name: disk0s2
Mount Point: /

Jul 8, 2009 7:50 PM in response to foxymulder

foxymulder,

Try unzipping or unrarring(sp?) a large file, or transferring a large file over from an external drive while simultaneously browsing the web. Alternatively, any other hard drive intensive program may tax your hard drive to the point where it hangs as described so much already, but I have found it usually occurs when two applications are attempting to access the drive. For me, playing a recording in Logic Pro whilst any other app is running results in an "overload" error message. Good luck!

Jul 8, 2009 8:21 PM in response to kcpedro

The most objective way is to download SMART utilities:
http://www.volitans-software.com/

Then click on "Attributes" "Show all".
Line "ID 199: UDMA CRC Error Count should be 0, if you see other or increasing numbers there you are experiencing the issue.

Basicaly what happens is that if there is a critical frequency of CRC errors, the beachball will start popping up as the operating system is trying to recover from the SATA bus errors.

This typicaly happens on heavy HD access or for example during Time machine backups to ext USB drives.

cheers,

Oliver.

Jul 9, 2009 2:41 PM in response to IanBurrell

I wanted to share some new information with anyone that might be able to temporarily utilize the same fix I've found through some very extensive research. On the Seagate drives that I have I found that there is indeed a set of pins that can be jumpered to force the drive into 1.5Gb/s mode. There is not a jumper in place and the pin set does not look like it's meant to be jumpered however as soon as I jumpered the last two pins my drive works again in my MBP. Albeit at 1.5GB/s speed but at least I'm not just sitting here waiting for Apple's Customer Relations Department to possibly return my call if they ever feel like it.

http://www.legitreviews.com/article/967/1/

Firmware update and SATA II hard drive

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