martyyn 2 Report post Posted April 25, 2007 Booted up my wifes laptop yesterday to get the following message No primary hard disk found Its making a fair bit of noise too Now its only used for email and internet stuff so I couldnt care less, but it also has all of our home video and pictures and I seriously dont want to lose those. I normally back up every couple of months but what Ive lost now I desperately want back. Ive got hold of a data recovery place off the web with a no data no fee arrangement, but do any of you have any experience with data recovery ? Any tips that I can try myself ? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
entscheidend 0 Report post Posted April 25, 2007 Best guess would be the hard drive has failed, hence all the noise it makes. You can actually take a hard drive out of a laptop and connect it to a desktop computer using a device called a USB Hard Drive enclosure. That way you can use the harddrive from the laptop through the USB port on another computer. Not a 100% guarantee, but definitly worth a try.... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
martyyn 2 Report post Posted April 25, 2007 Yep tried that, no luck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hybrid 1043 Report post Posted April 25, 2007 basically .. _don’t_ try yourself unless you really know what your doing .. The best chance to keep your data is to give it to one of these places who have the physical gear to do it.. I use to dabble in it myself and the more the disk is un-touched the better chance you have. Its usually just a mechanical failure of the armature. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Carl 3 Report post Posted April 25, 2007 So long as you've got legit software on the disk take it in to a pro, there's no way you can fix a mechanical problem yourself. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
martyyn 2 Report post Posted April 25, 2007 Jaysus, Im in the wrong business. Just heard from the recovery bloke and he believes he'll be 100% sucessful and if so it will cost between 1000-1500 dollars Do I like my photos that much ? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Ken Report post Posted April 25, 2007 "Noise" is NOT good!!! If the head mechanism is in any way damaged then continual start-ups could well be damaging the disk platter, much reducing any chances of recovery at all. I have, in the past, managed to swap the onboard drive controller with another from an exact model drive but I suspect the odds of doing that are very slim with a laptop HDD. You don't want to hear this but the best way to recover is from a backup - NO EXCUSES!!! See ya next week? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Andrew 30 Report post Posted April 26, 2007 I've used data recovery about 10 times now Cost is AT LEAST 2k per disk. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deftones 0 Report post Posted April 26, 2007 I agree with Ken. Nothing beats an old fashioned backup. I have one of those USB HDD enclosure things. Does the trick. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hybrid 1043 Report post Posted April 26, 2007 I wrote a lil bat file that copies all of our studio's Music HDD and Samples HDD to a 250Gb HDD ... its sitting down on the tray icon all I have to do is click it .. and it mirrors the data ... perfectly .. do this right after a recording session without fail ... already been caught with my pants down before... never again Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gus 5 Report post Posted April 26, 2007 a lil bat been caught with my pants down before hah Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
E30stz 0 Report post Posted April 26, 2007 (edited) I suggest you do what was mentioned early and put the hard-drive in a USB enclosure, if you can run it as a slave drive, your desktop might be able to repair it for you. Or you could get a IDE removeable tray drive for your desktop, get a IDE -> Laptop HD converter and then run it as a slave HD if running it as USB formfactor doesnt work. Running it as a slave, it should detect inconsistancys on the drive upon startup, and automatically try and bandage up the harddrive, keep in mind sometimes you can lose data, but generally its enough that you can run it at least as a secondary drive and retrieve all your information off before it dies for good. Edited April 26, 2007 by E30stz Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
OLLIE 26 Report post Posted April 28, 2007 it sounds as though it is mechanical which means 1-2k to recover data, you decide whether it's worth it. suggestions find out the brand of the hard drive, go to their website (on another computer) and download the drive diagnostic software which most brands have, plug the drive into the other pc in an enclosure and run the test. Backup!!! Norton ghost, genie backup, have a look on google for a good one, and invest in a DVDRW collection or an external drive to back up to. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nz320i 0 Report post Posted April 28, 2007 On Track Easy Recovery professional - from katz.com worked for me to get most of data from my so called "corupt" hdd. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
martyyn 2 Report post Posted July 2, 2007 Hate to drag up and old thread but thought Id post about what Ive been up to tonight. Decided to bite the bullet and try the urban myth of sticking the drive in a plastic zip-lock bag and sticking in the freezer. Didnt even need to bother doing that, stuck it in a bag between two ice packs whilst connected up to an external usb enclosure and job done Drive works well and Ive just dragged off everything of any value. So now its all going onto DVD for safe keeping. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bravo 35 Report post Posted July 2, 2007 While we're back on this, what is the easiest way to backup assuming you don't have a RAID array? For instance, I have an external HDD I can backup to. I have a partitioned drive with Windows and Apps on the left and Data on the right. How can I most effectively (read easy and quickly) backup remembering if it is not quick/easy I probably won't. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Ken Report post Posted July 2, 2007 While we're back on this, what is the easiest way to backup assuming you don't have a RAID array? For instance, I have an external HDD I can backup to. I have a partitioned drive with Windows and Apps on the left and Data on the right. How can I most effectively (read easy and quickly) backup remembering if it is not quick/easy I probably won't. Check out Robocopy - a freebe from MS. I use this in conjunction with Windows scheduler to a USB external drive. It produces a very nice log of progress too. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
walker 0 Report post Posted July 2, 2007 Hate to drag up and old thread but thought Id post about what Ive been up to tonight. Decided to bite the bullet and try the urban myth of sticking the drive in a plastic zip-lock bag and sticking in the freezer. Didnt even need to bother doing that, stuck it in a bag between two ice packs whilst connected up to an external usb enclosure and job done Drive works well and Ive just dragged off everything of any value. So now its all going onto DVD for safe keeping. Thats awesome. Nice to know something works! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites