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
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Is this a weird issue to have?

April 29th, 2019, 10:44

Hello,
I’m discussing an issue which happened a while ago. My problem with this is that this means I cannot remember all the details, but I will try my best.

On the day of the issue, I tried to connect my drive (MyBook Thunderbolt Duo 8TB) to my Mac as normal. The Mac could not seem to connect to it, and then a dialog message came up. (Unfortunately, because it was a while ago, I cannot remember exactly what this message said.) I clicked on a button I thought would solve the issue (again, can't remember what the message said), but then the drive somehow disappeared.

When I tried to connect it again, I could tell that it was not working as normal. Then, as now, the icon does not come up on my desktop, and Finder does not show anything. I am able to see it through Disk Utility on the Mac, and it says that the drive is 'not mounted'. Physically, the drive itself is working fine when connected up - there is a light on at the front.

This is all I can offer at the moment. I know this is not much information to give, but if there are any further tools or methods I could use to collect more information, I would be happy to do this to help a better discussion of the issue.

I did contact WD Support themselves and, upon request, ran First Aid on Disk Utility. The result is the following statement:

"First Aid found corruption that needs to be repaired. To repair the startup volume, run First Aid from Recovery. Click Done to continue."

WD then suggested I connect the Mac to the hard drive by ethernet. Sadly, the fact that the hard drive itself doesn’t appear to have an ethernet port anywhere seems to be indicative of the kind of help I would be getting from WD Support :roll: , so I decided to bring this here.
Here’s the inevitable point - there’s quite a lot of data in that hard drive I would stand to lose if I reformat it or something. I’ve learnt my lesson and have seriously upgraded my backup system since then, but didn’t want to give up on what could still be there and recoverable. To this end, I haven’t done anything else beyond the above until I get some better advice.

Re: Is this a weird issue to have?

April 29th, 2019, 17:17

If data has value, seek professional help. My advise: Search for user pcimage here, located in Peterborough.
They will take care of drive and data in the best possible way, without the need for you to rob a bank.

Re: Is this a weird issue to have?

May 1st, 2019, 6:14

Thank you. Would it be an idea for me to try a First Aid repair in recovery mode? Would that affect any possible diagnosis or repair if I were to hand it over to a professional afterwards?

Re: Is this a weird issue to have?

May 1st, 2019, 8:47

Try DiskWarrior to repair the volume.

Re: Is this a weird issue to have?

May 1st, 2019, 15:56

Disk Warrior is a decent idea, as it should give you a preview of the data before committing to disk.

It may or may not work... If it does pull up your data my advice would be to copy the data off to another drive from the preview, rather than commit the changes to disk.

Good luck!

Re: Is this a weird issue to have?

May 6th, 2019, 15:55

Thanks for the replies. After a bit of extra digging, I think I've found what could have happened. I think the dialog box may have asked me to initialize (or ignore/eject) and I went ahead with it, without really realising what that would mean.

Would the advice given so far still apply, or does this extra information offer something different?
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