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
October 26th, 2009, 4:21
Got a jvc film camera with this drive built in for dr. To be clear: the drive works
perfectly in the camera, but the customer has erased some photos.
All my systems have the same type of ide or sata frames built in. I put the hdd
to test in a bay to slide it into the appropriate frame in the test system I want
to use.
Usually when connecting this drive with a pc the pc hangs at drive(s) detection.
Deepspar freezes
pc3k no detection
data compass no detection - freezes
Ninja - no drive detected
Atola - detects the drive but reports a defect pcb
But a mainboard Asus P5PE-VM is able to recognise the drive and even gives
access to partition and data and I could do the DR.
What causes the problem, that only a simple and cheap mainboard is able
to have access where all expensive tools fail?
+++
October 26th, 2009, 6:07
Could you not have used the drive in the camera and mounted it as a USB device for recovery?
October 26th, 2009, 6:24
All interfaces are equal, but some interfaces are "MORE EQUAL" than other....

It happens more often than we think.
October 26th, 2009, 9:57
Maybe your adapter is bad
October 26th, 2009, 10:42
used 4 different adapters = of different manufacturers
Only one of them worked at all - but only on this mainboard.
+++
October 26th, 2009, 10:47
Another think one should always consider, is the possibility of an non-standard sector and/or block size, which will crash most (nearly all) systems. I have seen this a few times. 512 byte sectors is not always used. Especially in proprietary devices/systems.
October 26th, 2009, 11:22
this drive has 512 bytes per sector
October 27th, 2009, 5:13
I had a HS031GA -30GB Nexus on PC3k UDMA working fine last week.
October 27th, 2009, 5:14
but for the copy I changed the UDMA from 66 to 33 and worked ok
October 27th, 2009, 8:55
pcrecovery wrote:Another think one should always consider, is the possibility of an non-standard sector and/or block size, which will crash most (nearly all) systems. I have seen this a few times. 512 byte sectors is not always used. Especially in proprietary devices/systems.
Are you sure, the ss != 512?
Not was only logical remapping, like Linux does?
Janos
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