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
September 22nd, 2009, 7:21
hi can you help me in the following i want to get into data recovery and Data Erasure i do know alot about computers as i have learned alot over the years i have time on my hands as i am not working at the time been i live in england in birmingham
1 is there a good training course on data recovey in england
2 i use dban to wipe hard drives is this good or not is there better out there only after the very best for this have used dban and killdisk
3 i use acronis to image a hard drive ??? any comments on acronis
4 what action would you take to get into this field we all have to start somewere is there someone in england birmingham that i can see about this maybe work for them (training) and work experince
5 what tools/software would i need and cost maybe someone has websites for this
September 22nd, 2009, 10:54
Posting this three times will not help you. You're just annoying people.
September 22nd, 2009, 11:07
dobrevjetser wrote:Posting this three times will not help you. You're just annoying people.
kelly182237 wrote: i have time on my hands as i am not working at the time been
there is a lot of info on this forum, so go ahead and do some research....
September 22nd, 2009, 13:04
Answers, in order :
1) AFAIK, no. And beware of internet bullshit and of courses where you don't put hands on the INDUSTRY STANDARD diagnostics / repair tools. You don't need any generic course.
2) it depends on security demand : if you have to fulfill request for absolute security it would be insufficient. Maybe the best way would be drive factory selfscan but you need special tools (see 5) ) or the knowledge to start, monitor and eventually deal with. For "average joe" , zerofill is sufficient.
3) if drive has serious problems, every software is useful like a tit on a bull. For general use, it works.
4) I think nobody would let you in his lab and grab trade secrets just to build up a competitor. Industry require already skilled people and most probably you have to sign a strict NDA (Non Disclosure Agreement).
5) for data recovery and refurbishing : PC3000 UDMA is about 10'000 (TEN THOUSAND) $ . You'll need clean room equipment or a laminar flow bench (used : from $ 2000 up to 10'000) , platter and head extraction tools ($5000 estimated for a complete set) .
To repair and eventually diagnose PCBs : digital storage oscilloscope , $2500-3000 , SMD rework station ($1000-2000) , TTH soldering station ($250-1000) , a decent multimeter ($100-200) , precision tweezers, screwdrivers, torx from T3 to T20 etc. let's say $500 , dual tracking power supply with protection , $250-500 depending on power, and $1000-1500 on other probes, cables, adapters and other gizmos...
Not to mention : cleaning fluids, wiping stuff, clean room gear, gloves etc.
If you want to go further : BGA rework station ($3500) , DDA ($6500-10'000) complete with differential probe.
Knowledge : priceless and not available easily.
Before you ask : the prices are quite similar in EURO and are related to professional grade equipment, unless you want to use a soldering iron and multimeter bought at Tesco for £10 . No, you can't build a glovebox. No, there's no alternate for professional diagnostic equipment.
Better to say it straight than give false illusions.
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