Chip burners that can overwrite the SMART data aren’t expensive. I’ve also seen “refurbished” drives in which nobody even bothered to reset that data. In that case, the refurbishment apparently consists of a new sticker on the drive (sticker serial number not even matching the drives EPROM).
Chip burners that can overwrite the SMART data aren’t expensive. I’ve also seen “refurbished” drives in which nobody even bothered to reset that data. In that case, the refurbishment apparently consists of a new sticker on the drive (sticker serial number not even matching the drives EPROM).