Data Recovery
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@ajstringham said:
Try formatting the drive. Just a quick format in Windows. I've seen that give it enough stability to grab the files.
I would decide on your data recovery plans first, though. If you want to send it somewhere for professional recovery, do as little as possible. If you are not going to send it somewhere then this might work. Before you do that, try imaging it.
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@ajstringham said:
Try formatting the drive. Just a quick format in Windows. I've seen that give it enough stability to grab the files.
explain
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@Hubtech Formatting does not wipe the files. The file system is probably corrupt so it can't be read by Recuva. Formatting it gives you a stable read and allows for recovery. If you do a full format it'll be harder but under device manager just do a quick format and you'll be good.
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*drive manager, not device manager
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yeah, i did a quick format, now recovering files. even on usb3.0 and a 8GB 4c desktop...it's taking a long while
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@Hubtech It will. But I'm glad it's working now! If you ever get one clicking, put it in a plastic bag in the freezer for a few hours and try again. Works once in a while but it's an old trick. I've seen it work a few times.
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Can I ask?? Is there still a possible way of recovering some files from a broken hand disk??
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@XeL What's going on with it?
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@ajstringham the harddisk was exhausted or in other terms burnt.. is there a way to recover file from it??
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@XeL none! There is no way to recover data from a burnt HD.
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@XeL said:
@ajstringham the harddisk was exhausted or in other terms burnt.. is there a way to recover file from it??
There are many firms that do this work. It's called forensic recovery. It is very expensive but is pretty reliable.
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@pol.darreljade said:
@XeL none! There is no way to recover data from a burnt HD.
It's actually pretty common.
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depends on what you mean burned. actually burned? no. but if the drive physically died, there's a chance. I used Lazarus Data Recovery for a client way back. they have a "clean room" and physically remove the platters and reconstruct in a good HD chassis. it was 5-7K, but for him it was worth it.
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FYI, it was burned from as the system overheats..
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@XeL said:
FYI, it was burned from as the system overheats..
How burned? A system overheating would normally cause only very minimal damage.
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@pol.darreljade said:
@XeL none! There is no way to recover data from a burnt HD.
Not true. How do you think they get the info off the black boxes from crashed planes? They do as @hubtech describes. Clean room and physically removing the discs, etc. It works but as @scottalanmiller said, it can be several thousand per drive.
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@XeL This a server drive or a regular SATA drive?
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@ajstringham said:
@pol.darreljade said:
@XeL none! There is no way to recover data from a burnt HD.
Not true. How do you think they get the info off the black boxes from crashed planes? They do as @hubtech describes. Clean room and physically removing the discs, etc. It works but as @scottalanmiller said, it can be several thousand per drive.
I don't believe that black boxes have hard drives. That would make no sense for something designed to be so reliable.
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@scottalanmiller Then what would they have? They store data.
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@ajstringham said:
@scottalanmiller Then what would they have? They store data.
Disk drives are hardly the only means of storing data. In IT we don't use spinning disks in places where resilience is needed. Not even for laptops and desktops or tablets. Seems odd that an airplane would be less reliable than an iPad.