data-medics wrote:
Unless you're willing to make an investment in pro tools, I think it's time to give up DIY and take it to a data recovery shop. With the proper tools handling the soft/hard resets and power cycling it, should be able to get most the data.
Just know that if you keep trying to force the issue, it will eventually kill the drive completely.
Known and well understood before the recovery even started. If the drive didn't decide to glitch up when reading bad sectors now I'd already have all the (readable) data (
and the drive would have had to do less work) I'm willing to try for more data as is (
mitigating the offlining issue as best as is easily possible). If the drive utterly fails, oh well (
lets hope not). After diminishing returns on that, Seagate console it is.
arztt wrote:
Some Seagate drives go offline when their g-list (reallocated sectors) is full and when they hit a bad sector then.
On a 500GB Momentus 5400.6 I had the same problem.
Clearing the g-list with i4,1,22 command helped.
But better ask someone with the same drive first, if this will work in your case.
I had noted and considered that. The cost for the serial adaptor is very small, so this may be worth a try (after trying a little harder at letting ddrescue get the data). Does clearing the g-list restore the original (bad) sectors to where they were, in place of the spares? Most of the reallocation occurred during recovery, long after the last write allowed to the disk.
What is the syntax leading up to "i4,1,22"?
Also does anyone have any input (assuming one chooses this path)?
Benefits of clearing via "N1"? (and syntax)
Benefits of clearing the reallocated sectors list via "i4,1,22" with this model? (syntax and anyone else's experience)
__
Note for anyone with
important data on a broken drive: if the data is
that important, take it somewhere for recovery.