March 13th, 2020, 4:00

March 13th, 2020, 6:19
March 14th, 2020, 12:15
pepe wrote:Hello,
your drive seems to be having surface problems, which will get worse as you torture it. A disk like that must be cloned, possibly in an intelligent way, which involves specialist dr equipment. So if the data is important i recommend contacting a dr specialist, if not, you can try imaging it to a good drive and attempt file recovery from the image. Just consider, you may not have a second chance.
pepe
March 16th, 2020, 3:58
kbidols wrote:pepe wrote:Hello,
your drive seems to be having surface problems, which will get worse as you torture it. A disk like that must be cloned, possibly in an intelligent way, which involves specialist dr equipment. So if the data is important i recommend contacting a dr specialist, if not, you can try imaging it to a good drive and attempt file recovery from the image. Just consider, you may not have a second chance.
pepe
What could possibly make you think so? I haven't mentioned anything about its current physical state.
As of now, there is no clicking noise when the disk spins. It is connected through a SATA to USB connector, because my motherboard won't even recognize it anymore.
Would connecting it to another computer possibly make it accessible?
March 16th, 2020, 9:32
March 16th, 2020, 11:41
kbidols wrote:pepe wrote:Hello,
your drive seems to be having surface problems, which will get worse as you torture it. A disk like that must be cloned, possibly in an intelligent way, which involves specialist dr equipment. So if the data is important i recommend contacting a dr specialist, if not, you can try imaging it to a good drive and attempt file recovery from the image. Just consider, you may not have a second chance.
pepe
What could possibly make you think so? I haven't mentioned anything about its current physical state.
As of now, there is no clicking noise when the disk spins. It is connected through a SATA to USB connector, because my motherboard won't even recognize it anymore.
Would connecting it to another computer possibly make it accessible?
March 16th, 2020, 22:47
pcimage wrote:kbidols wrote:pepe wrote:Hello,
your drive seems to be having surface problems, which will get worse as you torture it. A disk like that must be cloned, possibly in an intelligent way, which involves specialist dr equipment. So if the data is important i recommend contacting a dr specialist, if not, you can try imaging it to a good drive and attempt file recovery from the image. Just consider, you may not have a second chance.
pepe
What could possibly make you think so? I haven't mentioned anything about its current physical state.
As of now, there is no clicking noise when the disk spins. It is connected through a SATA to USB connector, because my motherboard won't even recognize it anymore.
Would connecting it to another computer possibly make it accessible?
You've come here for advice, right?
You've been given excellent advice, from one of the best and most respected DR experts.
Yet, because you didn't like the advice you doubt him?
Good luck!
March 16th, 2020, 22:48
lcoughey wrote:The odds are, the root issue is physical, as suggested by other professionals. The more you run the drive, the higher the chances you will kill the drive.
I can only assume that your data is of no value to you, as you have chosen to beat away at your drive with the cheapest and crappiest data recovery programs one can find on the internet.
If you do value your data, stop and send your hard drive to a data recovery professional. If you don't value your data, check out hddsuperclone and DMDE.
March 16th, 2020, 22:49
Arch Stanton wrote:kbidols wrote:pepe wrote:Hello,
your drive seems to be having surface problems, which will get worse as you torture it. A disk like that must be cloned, possibly in an intelligent way, which involves specialist dr equipment. So if the data is important i recommend contacting a dr specialist, if not, you can try imaging it to a good drive and attempt file recovery from the image. Just consider, you may not have a second chance.
pepe
What could possibly make you think so? I haven't mentioned anything about its current physical state.
As of now, there is no clicking noise when the disk spins. It is connected through a SATA to USB connector, because my motherboard won't even recognize it anymore.
Would connecting it to another computer possibly make it accessible?
Because the scans take such a freaking long time. Granted you're using shitty software, could be that too even with a healthy drive. Normally with a RAW drive, using proper software you should be looking at a populated directory tree in a matter of minutes, assuming NTFS.
If you insist on DIY (bad idea in this case) then clone the drive first. Use something like HDDSuperClone.
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