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#31
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Recommend data recovery company?
On 2018-04-21 07:15, Zaidy036 wrote:
One last effort? Place drive in zip lock bag overnight in freezer. Quickly attach to PC and try to transfer files. I "recovered" a 1TB USB drive that would no longer spin-up that way last week, suspect a controller-board power-delivery issue, which apparently the cold temperature helped, because it had done this before and once it managed to spin-up it was good for months. But I'm not sure it would be enough for a drive that can't read anymore. Regards, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo God made the world in 6 days and was arrested on the 7th. |
#32
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Recommend data recovery company?
On 2018-04-21 00:47, nospam wrote:
In article , B00ze wrote: Got a 15 years old WD IDE hard drive, that was showing ZERO problems in SMART data, suddenly can no longer calibrate (i.e. it can't read anymore.) NOW the SMART data is showing something's wrong. what specifically is smart showing? do you have more than a pass/fail? Calibrate and Read, they're both like 1 or 2 (out of 100 or 199 or whatever) - it can't read, spinning-up is fine. The drive shows-up in Windows, so the interface to the computer works fine, but since it can't read, Windows keeps freezing-up. It's still running in that old computer, I just disabled it in the BIOS for now. Regards, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo Windows error 05 Multitasking attempted; system confused. |
#33
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Recommend data recovery company?
Hi Vanguard.
On 2018-04-21 10:26, VanguardLH wrote: B00ze wrote: Got a 15 years old WD IDE hard drive, that was showing ZERO problems in SMART data, suddenly can no longer calibrate (i.e. it can't read anymore.) NOW the SMART data is showing something's wrong. Hard drive "clicks" (heads go back and forth full disk) then quits trying. Have another of the same model, but hesitant moving the platters myself; apparently platters are not really "stuck" together and I could mis-align them (rotate them in relation to each other) rendering the whole thing un-readable. Was planning to move the data off but kept delaying since it showed no sign of problems... Now need a data recovery company; anyone have good experience with one and can recommend? How much are you willing to spend? Could be a few hundred dollars or a couple thousand depending on whether advanced (expensive) software could be used or they have to disassemble the drive in a clean room and use special equipment to read the magnetic dipoles from the platters. Max I'm paying is $500 Canadian. If they try to charge me $1500-$2000, I'm doing it myself. When my aunt found out it would cost $1500 to recover old data files from her defective HDD, she decided that old data wasn't really worth that much. Also, it is highly unlikely that they can recover 100% of the data from the platters. With luck being against you, likely the majority of the files you want to recover will be unrecoverable. It's not damaged because I had a fire or because the heads crashed into the platters and left nice circular traces into it. I suspect something like one of the heads just doesn't work anymore, nothing more than that. Recovery should be fairly simple. It was working fine on 100% of its surface in the morning, couldn't calibrate when I came home from work. I think it's just age - something failed, and it's not the spindle motor, and I don't think it's the actuator/voice-coil that drives the heads, since they still move back and forth. nospam mentioned DriveSavers. They seem to be about what was estimated to rescue data from my aunt's HDD and the company name sounds familiar. Yeah, we'll see; that dude in your link paid them $1900, no way I'm paying that. I have an exact same drive/model they can use for parts, if they can't be reasonable I'm not playing. https://www.geek.com/chips/drivesave...-drive-574764/ "Pricing is determined by the drive capacity, complexity and completeness of the data recovery. The cost for recovering data from a drive with severe media damage, like mine, is about $1900. An average single drive data recovery costs about $1500." https://acsdata.com/drivesavers-data-recovery/ That has ACS extolling DriveSavers, a competitor. ACS has an interesting video of how to move platters from one drive to another: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZx-tU1_gOw Considering the how expensive it is to use physical recovery services, I find regular scheduled backups (which eliminates user intervention since humans are unreliable in saving backups at critical moments in change of state to their drives) to other internal media (for fast restores) and a 2nd copy of offline media to be far cheaper and the shortest time to recover. Yeah, I'm more careful now (duplication and SnapRAID) but that computer with the failed drive was old, and I kept reporting copying the files over the network (slow) to later. Shoulda taken the time to do it lol. Can you find a seller of the same type (IDE) of drive at the same capacity (or a minimum size that would encompass the data files you think are on the failed drive)? The rescue service provider might get some of the data files off the failed drive but they may not be able to put them back on the same type and size of drive you had. How accurate is your measure of 15 years old for the failed drive? Up until somewhere to the 80's, MFM was used. That got replaced by RLL by the early 90's. Then came PATA and SATA (and some others). Since you mentioned IDE, yours is using PATA which was called ATA or [E]IDE before SATA came out. It's not so old as to use MFM or RLL; it probably uses PRML. It's a PATA drive, it does PATA-100 if I recall, interface-side - i.e. it uses the 80-wires cables. I don't really need another drive, once I have the data the old computer goes to recycling. I'm keeping the computer now in case I want to do recovery myself and need it to read back the drive. Regards, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo Sex is not the answer, it's the question. Yes is the answer. |
#34
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Recommend data recovery company?
On 2018-04-22 02:52, David Samuel Barr wrote:
I can recommend https://sherlockdatarecovery.com/ which last year recovered data for me from an 11-year-old WD drive which, right after producing a clean SMART report, suddenly became completely unreadable. Thanks David. Do you recall how much you had to pay? Thank you. Best Regards, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo Light speed! Ridiculous speed! Ludicrous speed! |
#35
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Recommend data recovery company?
On 2018-04-22 05:39, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
On 4/21/2018 12:09 AM, B00ze wrote: Good day. Got a 15 years old WD IDE hard drive, that was showing ZERO problems in SMART data, suddenly can no longer calibrate (i.e. it can't read anymore.) NOW the SMART data is showing something's wrong. Hard drive "clicks" (heads go back and forth full disk) then quits trying. Have another of the same model, but hesitant moving the platters myself; apparently platters are not really "stuck" together and I could mis-align them (rotate them in relation to each other) rendering the whole thing un-readable. Was planning to move the data off but kept Rather than move the platters, why not move the controller (from the good drive to the dud), if you think that's what's faulty? Doing that might also be possible without breaking the seal on the housings. Yeah, I will try that first if I decide the recovery labs practice extortion. You can hear head movement, but can you hear platter rotation? They might perhaps just be stuck. (I had that, but in my case one at least of the heads had stuck to the platter - I think; after all the recommended things [freezing, shaking in various ways, ...] I finally bit the bullet and opened up the drive in a clean cabinet at work: I could see the heads weren't in the park position. When I attempted to turn the pack [the spindle took the same Torx driver as the screws holding the case shut - don't know if that's always the case], I felt something unstick, and the heads then were free. Fortunately, after putting it all back together, I was able to recover 95% or more of the data, so it must have only been a tiny spot-weld somewhere. [I considered the drive junk after that.] Obviously not stuck heads in your case if you can hear them moving, but the platters might be stuck rotation-wise? Just a guess.) It spins fine, no SMART issues there, but it can't read. I'm also curious about how they recover drives if not by using another of the same model (where they hell how they going to find one as old as mine, and can they really keep one of each model of ALL drives?) If you can enlighten me on that too, would be great. Thank you. Best Regards, I would imagine there are "families" of drives, so they can use common controllers - possibly using a master, versatile, controller. (I also suspect that a _lot_ of the companies do little more than we do, other than perhaps having "clean" facilities so they can open up to see if faults like I had are the problem.) Yeah, I read in a link someone posted in this thread, all they need is a drive in the same family, not necessarily the exact same model. But will they have such an old drive family around? I DO have another drive anyway, they could use that. As far as what they do, they can do more than we can (like Paul posted, they can address the drive via a serial interface) but I don't think they have a programmable "master" drive that can read any platter, any sector size, any track size, etc. Regards, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo Windows error 04 Erroneous error, nothing wrong. |
#36
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Recommend data recovery company?
On 2018-04-22 08:35, VanguardLH wrote:
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: Rather than move the platters, why not move the controller (from the good drive to the dud), if you think that's what's faulty? Doing that might also be possible without breaking the seal on the housings. The problem with swapping PCBs (assuming you can find a replacement that matches the old one) is the calibration and low-level bad-sector mapping recorded by the factory during manufacture and testing won't match from the replacement PCB to what is on the failed drive's PCB. Sectors marked and masked out by the replacement drive's minicontroller will prevent access to sectors for files you want to recover on the failed drive, and you would end up trying to use the bad sectors no longer mapped out to the minicontroller on the failed drive. https://www.hddzone.com/fix_hard_drive_pcb_board.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yn2eL4o-6Eo Timemark 5:40 - Swap doesn't work. Timemark 7:12 - Gotta swap the ROM chip. Nice info, didn't know about the calibration! Thanks! You'll end up having to move the ROM chip, if still usabled, from the failed drive's PCB to the identical replacement PCB. Easier and more likely to succeed by repairing the failed drive's PCB, like replacing a burnt TVS diode, than to replace the PCB and somehow transplant the calibration and bad-sector tables to the replacement PCB. The drive still spins and shows-up in Windows, so it's not a power-delivery problem. I can swap the ROM chip, provided I am very very patient with this (I don't have an air gun, so I'd be stuck with a soldering iron.) If there was no possibility of a failed head then I'd swap the boards right away... Since the OP is asking about using a recovery lab on his failed drive, I doubt he has the skills and gear to swap the ROM chip assuming he finds a donor drive with EXACTLY the same PCB (same minicontroller, same firmware) and even knows how to identify which is the ROM chip to move. I have another drive of the same make and model, bought at the same time. Identifying the chip might be a problem if there's a bunch of similar chips on the board - the days where I could just look-up a chip number in TTL books to see what it does are long gone. There are lots of urban legends out there on swapping PCBs and magically the replacement PCB on the failed drive suddenly works. The success rate of a simple PCB swap is rare. Go to your nearest casino and you'll have better odds of winning enough money to pay the recovery lab. Well, I won't get nowhere if the problem is a failed head; then I'd have to swap the head assembly and put the ROM chip back. It's all kinda risky, those heads are very fragile, which is why I'm looking for a cheap recovery place. But there's no way I'm paying $2000 just to get old game ISOs and old documents - that drive has been in my old computer for like 5 years with me not reading a single file from it (I used it as a download slave, i.e. I downloaded on it and immediately copied the stuff onto a USB drive. The data that was already there, I haven't really touched in a long time.) Best Regards, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo You! In the red, investigate that noise! -Kirk |
#37
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Recommend data recovery company?
On 2018-04-22 21:14, Diesel wrote:
B00ze news Apr 2018 04:09:33 GMT in alt.windows7.general, wrote: Good day. Got a 15 years old WD IDE hard drive, that was showing ZERO problems in SMART data, suddenly can no longer calibrate (i.e. it can't read anymore.) NOW the SMART data is showing something's wrong. Hard drive "clicks" (heads go back and forth full disk) then quits trying. Have another of the same model, but hesitant moving the platters myself; apparently platters are not really "stuck" together and I could mis-align them (rotate them in relation to each other) rendering the whole thing un-readable. Was planning to move the data off but kept delaying since it showed no sign of problems... Hmm. If you have two identical drives, you can try temporarily swapping the logic board. Sometimes, the board itself is the culprit and your drives internals are actually okay; along with your data. Yeah, if all I find are $2000 repair shops then that's what I'll do. Thanks, -- ! _\|/_ Sylvain / ! (o o) Memberavid-Suzuki-Fdn/EFF/Red+Cross/SPCA/Planetary-Society oO-( )-Oo BUREAUCRACY: Transforming energy into solid waste. |
#38
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Recommend data recovery company?
In message , B00ze
writes: On 2018-04-22 08:35, VanguardLH wrote: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: Rather than move the platters, why not move the controller (from the good drive to the dud), if you think that's what's faulty? Doing that might also be possible without breaking the seal on the housings. The problem with swapping PCBs (assuming you can find a replacement that matches the old one) is the calibration and low-level bad-sector mapping recorded by the factory during manufacture and testing won't match from the replacement PCB to what is on the failed drive's PCB. Sectors marked and masked out by the replacement drive's minicontroller will prevent access to sectors for files you want to recover on the failed drive, and you would end up trying to use the bad sectors no longer mapped out to the minicontroller on the failed drive. https://www.hddzone.com/fix_hard_drive_pcb_board.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yn2eL4o-6Eo Timemark 5:40 - Swap doesn't work. Timemark 7:12 - Gotta swap the ROM chip. Nice info, didn't know about the calibration! Thanks! You'll end up having to move the ROM chip, if still usabled, from the failed drive's PCB to the identical replacement PCB. Easier and more likely to succeed by repairing the failed drive's PCB, like replacing a burnt TVS diode, than to replace the PCB and somehow transplant the calibration and bad-sector tables to the replacement PCB. The drive still spins and shows-up in Windows, so it's not a power-delivery problem. I can swap the ROM chip, provided I am very very patient with this (I don't have an air gun, so I'd be stuck with a soldering iron.) If there was no possibility of a failed head then I'd swap the boards right away... I'd say it's probably worth - if you're considering this route - getting the hot-air gun. My last 6 months' employment (with a company which repaired car electronics; I was mostly on dashboards [the bit behind the dials - it's a lot of the computing in modern cars]) involved a lot of replacement of surface-mount devices; the devices (packages) themselves are surprisingly robust, it's the tracks - and especially pads - on the board that tend to lift. Especially where it's a pad connected to a track that only goes under the device. Since the OP is asking about using a recovery lab on his failed drive, I doubt he has the skills and gear to swap the ROM chip assuming he finds a donor drive with EXACTLY the same PCB (same minicontroller, same firmware) and even knows how to identify which is the ROM chip to move. I have another drive of the same make and model, bought at the same time. Identifying the chip might be a problem if there's a bunch of similar chips on the board - the days where I could just look-up a chip number in TTL books to see what it does are long gone. Yes, even reading the part number may require optical aid - and it's highly likely to be a proprietary one anyway, though if you ask (e. g. here) there's likely to be someone who recognises part of the number. [] Well, I won't get nowhere if the problem is a failed head; then I'd I wonder if a failed head could fail in such a way that it damages the electronics to which it connects. I suspect open-circuit is more likely than a short, but I don't actually know what the head technology _is_ these days (my mind still visualises some sort of coil - while the technology still involves magnetism, it can't be _too_ far from that). have to swap the head assembly and put the ROM chip back. It's all kinda risky, those heads are very fragile, which is why I'm looking for a cheap recovery place. But there's no way I'm paying $2000 just to get old game ISOs and old documents - that drive has been in my old Is that what's there? For game ISOs, presumably you could find copies of the game CDs on ebay? The documents obviously not. computer for like 5 years with me not reading a single file from it (I used it as a download slave, i.e. I downloaded on it and immediately copied the stuff onto a USB drive. The data that was already there, I haven't really touched in a long time.) Best Regards, If you hadn't accessed it for 5 years, do you actually need it anyway? I can see myself still wanting to access it for completeness (and crossness with myself for not having backed it up), but ... -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf I'd rather trust the guys in the lab coats who aren't demanding that I get up early on Sundays to apologize for being human. -- Captain Splendid (quoted by "The Real Bev" in mozilla.general, 2014-11-16) |
#39
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Recommend data recovery company?
In article , B00ze
wrote: Taking the drive apart physically to gain access to the platters though would be a very bad idea and will almost certainly result in further damaging the drive. incredibly stupid. First of all, this is a 15 year old drive, things were bigger then (bigger heads, bigger area for each bit on the platter, etc.) so it is not as fragile as more recent drives (still pretty fragile however.) I have opened and played around inside hard drives before, and did not loose the drive. A clean room is nice, but not necessary if all I want to do is read whatever I can ONCE from the drive. a clean room is necessary, but it's the only copy of your data and if you want to risk it, go right ahead. |
#40
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Recommend data recovery company?
In article , B00ze
wrote: Got a 15 years old WD IDE hard drive, that was showing ZERO problems in SMART data, suddenly can no longer calibrate (i.e. it can't read anymore.) NOW the SMART data is showing something's wrong. what specifically is smart showing? do you have more than a pass/fail? Calibrate and Read, they're both like 1 or 2 (out of 100 or 199 or whatever) - it can't read, spinning-up is fine. The drive shows-up in Windows, so the interface to the computer works fine, but since it can't read, Windows keeps freezing-up. It's still running in that old computer, I just disabled it in the BIOS for now. try it on a non-windows system. if you don't have a non-windows system available, try spinrite: https://www.grc.com/sr/spinrite.htm |
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