Data recovery and disk repair questions and discussions related to old-fashioned SATA, SAS, SCSI, IDE, MFM hard drives - any type of storage device that has moving parts
March 15th, 2009, 13:48
Hi,
A company is trying to recover data from my existing hard drive (Mac Notebook laptop). I have been told, they (or I), need to find a "Donor" hard drive(more than likely used), which is an EXACT match to the following criteria. Once found this company will remove the heads from the donor and installed into the original drive, with hopes the data can be extracted.
I am not a computer "guru" so I don't know if the above can done accomplished. Can it?
Seagate momentus 5400.3,
SN: 5RM0BW9F
120GB,
FW: 3.CAE,
Model: ST9120822AS,
Site: WU,
Date: 08031
Cheers!
Greg
March 15th, 2009, 14:45
Good luck on this one Greg, this is a particuarly nasty drive to work on.
We have been seeing many of these Chinese 3.CAE versions of this model, and so far all have been non-recoverable due to platter damage.
IMHO these are 7.01 drives re-labelled. (google "Seagate 7.01") for more info.
March 15th, 2009, 14:50
IMHO... what does this mean?
Cheers!
Greg
March 15th, 2009, 14:52
In My Humble Opinion:) by the way if im not wrong that version has tendence to head crash on the middle of platters like SA zone
March 15th, 2009, 14:58
Yes Alberto, this does appear to be the case
March 15th, 2009, 19:07
Similar experiences here.
March 15th, 2009, 20:00
I had quiet few of those with same problem, but could recover one of them.
As for you Greg, get some other company to atempt a recovery for you. (Just my advice)
March 15th, 2009, 21:24
What DR pro makes a client provide a donor???
Like if you go to the hospital, you have to bring along your own blood supply??
March 16th, 2009, 6:54
jono-ats wrote:What DR pro makes a client provide a donor???
Like if you go to the hospital, you have to bring along your own blood supply??
lol. I agree, I dont ever recall asking customers to supply their own parts. Having the right contacts and the ability to source donors is a requirement for any DR company in my opinion.
Maybe you should request your media back and send it to someone whi has more experience and more chance your data will be rescued.
I am assuming that cost was an issue when selecting a DR company......
March 16th, 2009, 8:43
Out of 12 cases against 7.01 and 3.CAE i only managed to score 3 positive results (well, not 100% data recovered, but it's better than the other 9)
I will surely think twice to accept any of these models sent in to my workshop. I only got 6 donors left (4 for 7.01 and 2 for 3.CAE), and I'm assuming, chances against these models is < 50% success.
March 16th, 2009, 9:52
What really is frustrating about them is that they usually kill the donor heads. Wouldn't be so bad if you didn't get a recovery but at least the donor heads survived.
March 16th, 2009, 10:32
Yes. correct. And it's already hard to find "healthy" donors for these models. Almost all of them are already damaged.
March 16th, 2009, 11:13
pcimage wrote:Good luck on this one Greg, this is a particuarly nasty drive to work on.
We have been seeing many of these Chinese 3.CAE versions of this model, and so far all have been non-recoverable due to platter damage.
IMHO these are 7.01 drives re-labelled. (google "Seagate 7.01") for more info.
anybody tried to use 7.01`s heads to put to 3.xxx chinese ones?
November 26th, 2009, 10:29
I too am looking for a Seagate Momentus ST9120822as 3.cae wu as adonor drive.
Lucky for me on this one there is no platter damage. Anyone with a donor I'd be super grateful for contact!
best
Rowland
rowland@seefood.tv
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