ST98823AS Seagate 2.5″ hard drive with a storage capacity of 80GB and featuring a SATA interface. ST98823AS Seagate 80GB 5400RPM SERIAL ATA-150 (SATA) Laptop 8MB Cache 2.5-inch Hard Drive.

All information about the Seagate ST98823AS hard disk drive: technical parameters, failure symptoms, free asked questions, reviews, HDD repair and data recovery.

Seagate ST98823AS Technical Details:

  • Hard Disk Model: SEAGATE ST98823AS
  • Disk Family: Momentus 5400.2 120GB 8823
  • Form Factor: 2.5″
  • Capacity: 80 GB (80 x 1 000 000 000 bytes)
  • Number Of Disks: 2
  • Number Of Heads: 3
  • Rotational Speed: 5400 RPM
  • Rotation Time: 11.11 ms
  • Average Rotational Latency: 5.56 ms
  • Disk Interface: Serial-ATA/150
  • Buffer-Host Max. Rate: 150 MB/seconds
  • Buffer Size: 8192 KB
  • Average Seek Time: 12.5 ms
  • Width: 69.85 mm (2.75 inch)
  • Depth: 100.5 mm (3.96 inch)
  • Height: 9.5 mm (0.37 inch)
  • Weight: 100 grams (0.22 pounds)
  • Acoustic (Idle): 2.3 Bel
  • Acoustic (Min performance and volume): 2.5 Bel
  • Acoustic (Max performance and volume): 3.0 Bel
  • Required Power For Spinup: 1200 mA
  • Power Required (Seek): 2.4 W
  • Power Required (Idle): 1.2 W
  • Power Required (Standby): 0.36 W
  • Manufacturer: Seagate Technology

Seagate ST98823AS Hard Drives:

ST98823AS Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5 Inch Hard Drive

  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-141, FW 3.14, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-022, FW 7.24, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 3PK, AMK, PN 9W3183-030, FW 8.03, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 3PK, AMK, PN 9W3183-040, FW 7.01, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 3PL, AMK, PN 9W3183-502, FW 3.04, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-188, FW 3.06, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-501, FW 3.03, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 3PK, AMK, PN 9W3183-022, FW 7.24, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 3PK, AMK, PN 9W3183-303, FW 3.06, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-040, FW 7.01, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-030, FW 8.03, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive
  • ST98823AS, 5PK, WU, PN 9W3183-032, FW 8.04, Seagate 80GB SATA 2.5″ Hard Drive

Seagate ST98823AS Failure Symptoms:

  • Electrical Failure Symptoms:
    Drive is powered, but shows no sign of function;
    Disk knocking as the motor fails to spin;
    Clicking sound as the heads search or initialize;
  • Mechanical Failure Symptoms:
    Clicking, grinding sounds;
    Completely quiet due to ” motor freeze”;
    “music” tone as the disk is powered up;
  • Logical Failure Examples:
    Accidental deletion, accidental format, file corruption, software bugs, file system corruption, viruses and malware, and many, many more.
  • Firmware Failure Symptoms:
    drive powers up, but is not recognised by the computer;
    Drive powers up, but is recognised wrongly, sometimes with nonsensical characters;
    Drive freezes during booting up;
  • Bad Platter Area Symptoms:
    Hard disk still accessible but appear to “hang” or “sluggish”;
    Constant Cyclic Redundancy (CRC) errors;
    Unable to access folders or files which could be seen;
  • Complex Failure Model

Seagate ST98823AS Data Recovery & HDD Repair:

When it comes to data recovery one of the most common problems Seagate ST98823AS Hard Disk Drive experience is burnt circuit board(PCB). So if you will need to match a replacement PCB, it is important that you note the “Board Number” of your current circuit board in addition to the hard drive’s “Model Number“.

Multiple PCB Number revisions:
100397877, 100349359, etc.

One thought on “Seagate ST98823AS”
  1. My daughter was recently given some photos on this drive (ST98823AS). Is it easy to attach it to a computer so I can read the files & copy them? I have an HP laptop and an Asus desktop both from about 2016. I was going to look inside my Asus, but there are warning stickers about invalidating any guarantee if I open it up. Is there a USB device that I can buy & plug it into instead? Or if I open up my desktop, are there likely to be spare drive cables available I can attach it to?

    rggreen@gmail.com

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