A common scam involves low-capacity drives (e.g., 2GB) being hacked to report a higher capacity (e.g., 128GB) to the OS. The Au6989SN MPTool can overwrite these hacked parameters, setting the drive back to its true physical capacity. This prevents data corruption that occurs when a user writes more data than the drive can physically hold.
Title: Technical Analysis and Forensic Application of the Alcor Micro Au6989SN MPTool
Abstract
This paper provides a comprehensive technical examination of the Alcor Micro Au6989SN MPTool, a proprietary software utility used for the mass production and firmware maintenance of flash memory storage devices utilizing the Alcor Micro AU6989SN controller. As the market for flash storage expands, the prevalence of controller-specific management tools has significant implications for data recovery specialists and digital forensic investigators. This document explores the architecture of the tool, its operational modes, the structure of the AU6989SN controller, and the forensic challenges and opportunities presented by "mass production tools" (MPTools) in the context of data sanitization and device restoration.
To understand the tool, one must first understand the target hardware. The AU6989SN is a USB 2.0 flash memory controller typically used in budget to mid-range USB flash drives and memory cards. Alcor Micro Au6989sn Mptool
Key Architectural Features:
The MPTool is the bridge that configures these parameters. It tells the controller how to interpret the specific NAND flash chips soldered onto the PCB (Printed Circuit Board). A common scam involves low-capacity drives (e
Pro Tip: Search for AlcorMP_AU6989SN_ followed by the latest year. Example: "AlcorMP AU6989SN 2019." Do not use "universal" tools—they rarely work.