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
November 16th, 2010, 5:06
My data is not that important, so I though i'd give it a shot myself. I am prepared to loose the data.
I know there was lots of discussion a year back on new multi-platter exchanger tools, and the prices seemd ridiculously high then.
I'm hoping someone is now selling something more reasonably priced for what is essentially plastic, metal and some bolts.
Either that...or else I try this.....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgqOcEAdSas
November 16th, 2010, 5:13
Your right, your data cant be important...
November 16th, 2010, 5:44
This should be moved to the fun topic...
November 16th, 2010, 5:51
I thought you guys would have a chuckle at the video

On a serious note though...are there now any lower cost tools?
November 16th, 2010, 5:57
yes.
November 16th, 2010, 5:57
yes.
November 16th, 2010, 5:58
The physical repairs you want to attempt consist of a good understanding of your problem, and even better understanding of the media you are working with. Data recovery is very complicated and perfecting a commercial tool that is suitable for DIY is an expensive process hence expensive costs.
Any cheap tools, or homemade tools will likely not be suitable and will cause further problems. If this is really what you want to do then do it properley. It will likely fail, but it could be good fun
And dont forget to tell us the final outcome
November 16th, 2010, 7:56
He forgot to polish the surface with a banana.
November 16th, 2010, 8:14
Hmm perhaps a tuna tin as well. At least then you can make sandwiches after losing your data
November 16th, 2010, 11:12
WTB for 3.5"
November 16th, 2010, 13:12
petkus wrote:WTB for 3.5"

Go buy a catering size tin of beans
November 16th, 2010, 13:24
markindc wrote:My data is not that important, so I though i'd give it a shot myself.
Beretta, S&W or Colt ?
November 16th, 2010, 13:28
is that for multi platter drives?
pcimage wrote:petkus wrote:WTB for 3.5"

Go buy a catering size tin of beans

November 16th, 2010, 13:30
Hard
Core disk Porno, need use Termianal
November 16th, 2010, 22:27
No multiple platter drives need foam spacer inserted into the middle of them and around key point around the drive. Then you need some special sticky tape you know the one that does not remove at all to attach this to the drive to hold them in place. After you can use your bean can and move them to the new chassis on this one. This way you are insured the platters do not move on you.
November 18th, 2010, 10:45
Too complicated! All you need is a can of expanding foam- fill compartment and platters wont move! Just spay Pam on case to make it easy to remove.
November 18th, 2010, 18:18
HDD Spaz wrote:yes.
Can you point me to them?
November 18th, 2010, 18:26
hddguy wrote:The physical repairs you want to attempt consist of a good understanding of your problem, and even better understanding of the media you are working with. Data recovery is very complicated and perfecting a commercial tool that is suitable for DIY is an expensive process hence expensive costs.
Any cheap tools, or homemade tools will likely not be suitable and will cause further problems. If this is really what you want to do then do it properley. It will likely fail, but it could be good fun
And dont forget to tell us the final outcome

- I have an old school, Seagate ST39140A, 9.1 GB drive (
http://www.storagereview.com/articles/9 ... amed9.html). 4 platters!
- It dropped while it was still accessing data (don't ask how)!

- I think chilli bean cans are the way to go!
- There have to be some options -(maybe rent a tool or something?) I simply dont have the anywhere near the kind of money it would cost to get it fixed by others.
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