Chipgenius: V4.20
Controller: Alcor AU6989SN-GT Flash ID: AD 3A 18 A3 00 – Hynix H27UBG8T2B (8GB) Possible Flash Chips: 8GB (single die) Drive Capacity: 64GB (faked by firmware) Counterfeit. The controller was re-flashed with a fake capacity firmware. Using Alcor’s mass production tool (found via the controller ID), I restored the drive to its real 8GB capacity. Not a 64GB drive, but a usable USB stick instead of e-waste.
Many technicians still keep a copy of v4.20 on their USB repair toolkit because for 90% of pre-2018 drives. Real-World Use Case: Detecting a Fake Capacity Drive Let me walk you through an example from my own workshop. chipgenius v4.20
A “64GB” SanDisk Cruzer Blade that corrupts files after 4GB. Controller: Alcor AU6989SN-GT Flash ID: AD 3A 18