3.8 KiB
F3 Command Reference — confirmed vs. uncertain
The Seagate F3 architecture terminal is common across modern Seagate drives, but the command set differs by family. The well-documented recipes are from the 7200.11 "Moose" / Barracuda era (circa 2009, the famous BSY/0-LBA bricking). A 16 TB Exos X18 (ST16000NM004J) is many generations newer and its F3 dialect is not reliably documented publicly. Treat everything below accordingly.
Ground truth (safe to rely on)
- Electrical: F3 UART is 3.3 V TTL, 8N1. Baud is one of
9600 / 38400 / 115200 (sweep with the bridge's
~1/~2/~3menu). 38400 is the most common default. - Entering the terminal: after the boot banner, Ctrl-Z →
F3 T>prompt.F3 T>= top level.F3 2>etc. = other diagnostic levels. - Level change:
/followed by a level id, e.g./2,/1,/T,/C. - Help:
?at a prompt may dump that level's command list. Always run?and record the output before issuing anything. This is how you learn the actual command tokens for this firmware instead of guessing. - Logging: every command may have side effects; keep
screen -Lrunning.
CLAR200-specific expectation
This drive boots and answers INQUIRY (it is not BSY-hung), so you will
probably get an F3 T> prompt without the isolation trick. The lock is the EMC
firmware refusing SCSI FORMAT/READ-CAP — the F3 path sidesteps SCSI. The
realistic in-terminal goal is a low-level format / translator regeneration to
512-byte logical sectors (the drive is likely stuck at 520 B EMC-DIF and/or in
a "format corrupt / block size 0" state).
Candidate commands — VERIFY with ?, do NOT fire blind
These are 7200.11-era and listed only so you recognize the shapes of
commands. Confirm each against this drive's own ? output before use. Many
will not exist or will differ on Exos.
| Intent | 7200.11-era token | Status on Exos X18 |
|---|---|---|
| Spin down motor (level 2) | Z |
unconfirmed |
| Spin up motor (level 2) | U |
unconfirmed |
| Regenerate SMART (level 1) | N1 |
unconfirmed |
| Partition regenerate (level T) | i4,1,22 |
unconfirmed |
| Format / regen translator (level T) | m0,2,2,0,0,0,0,22 |
unconfirmed |
| Low-level format w/ sector size | m0,6,2,,,,,22 (historic 512-format) |
likely different |
⚠️ The m0,... translator/format commands are exactly the ones that, with wrong
parameters, can make a drive worse. On Exos, the safer modern route is often a
proper Format Unit at the format level with an explicit bytes-per-sector of
512 — but the token for that comes from ?, not this table.
BSY isolation trick (contingency only)
Only if the terminal is completely unresponsive / the drive hangs BSY at power-on:
- Power off. Slip a thin insulator (business card / Kapton) between the PCB and the head-contact block (or motor contacts, per the drive) so firmware boots without reading the system area.
- Power on → you should now get
F3 T>(firmware skipped the unreadable SA). - Carefully remove the insulator / re-seat contacts without powering down.
- Spin up and proceed.
This is a 7200.11 technique. It is unlikely to be needed here (the drive isn't BSY) and is drive-mechanically risky — last resort.
Sources / further reading (verify, don't trust blindly)
- HDDGURU / MRT / PC-3000 community threads on "CLAR200" and "SS160520" Seagate EMC drives — the recurring finding is: SCSI tools fail, F3 terminal or array decommission is the path.
- Seagate 7200.11 BSY fix write-ups — for F3 terminal mechanics (prompt,
/levels,?), not for the exact Exos command tokens.
When you discover the real Exos X18 tokens during the session, record them here so ZR511KWK (and any future EMC drive) is a known quantity.