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After successfully using software data recovery tools to rescue accidently deleted pics from a friends CF card word has gotten around that I might be someone to turn to when data disappears. So far I have managed to take an image of another friends dying hard drive (it was clicking but still accessable using a USB SATA/ide box) and recover the files using R-Studio. Even if my friends think I am worth asking for help I am most definitely a total noob and I am afraid the next recovery project is beyond me....
The data to be recovered is sentimental to its owner but not essential and my friend has said he can pay up to $US600 but the quotes he got from professional data recovery firms are totally out of his budget (around $2000 - $3000). By the way I Live in Australia and our exchange rate is about $1 australian = $0.90 US.
Here is the situation OS is windows XP pro Hard drives are 2 x WD 250 GB Caviar SATA drives set up as RAID0 the drives were partitioned C: 50GB had windows and program files F: 225GB of movie iso images G: 225GB of which 100GB are jpegs and pdf there is no backup since around 50GB of holiday photos were put on and the task is to recover those photos and any documents from the C:mydocuments
the symptoms were firstly that he noticed some ticking noises on startup but didn't recognise significance of this and continued to use computer normally for about 3 days. Then on morning of fourth day the computer wont boot. It gets to "booting from CD...." and never gets any further. Looking in the BIOS the only devices detected are the DVD-RW drive and one of the WD250 GB hard drives (it is plugged into the SATA 3 port of the motherboard and is detected as connected to IDE 3. The other drive is plugged into SATA port 4 but nothing shows up on the BIOS. On closer inspection during start up, the hard drive connected to SATA 3 port (which i will call, hopefully not erroneously, "the good drive") can be heard powering up and warming with normal temp and noise for a hard drive. The drive connected to SATA 4 port (the bad drive) can be heard powering on followed by three ticks about one second apart from each other then powering down (this noise occurs when the computer is first switched on then again while the BIOS is looking for a boot drive.
I have taken both drives out of the computer and installed windows on a new 500GB drive. and the computer works fine but we are left with the problem of how to recover the photos.
The professional places my friend asked have all said that because its RAID they wont offer "no recovery no fee" they insist on up front payment of $500 then they estimate it to be a "hardware failure" which will cost $1700 to repair the broken drive (in addition to the up front $500 fee). They say that if it turns out to be a software issue they can recover the data from the drive for $500 to $750 depending on whether its firmware or PCB. they will still then charge an extra $250 to ghost (or make an image) of the Good drive, then they will charge a further $200 to $400 to reconstruct the array.
Does anybody know if there is anyway for a newbie to safely diagnose whether the problem is PCB, firmware or head problem. From what I read the software MHDD should be perfect for doing this, but before I try it what are the risks that using this software will damage the data further?
I dont see why we should pay $250 to make an image copy of the good drive, that is something I can do. Now if I can find a way (or find an expert... any volunteers?) who can make an image of the Bad drive, and i have an image of the good drive on two new hard drives how difficult do you think it will be to use software to rejoin the stripes and recover photos that can be put on another large new drive.
My thoughts are if someone can make an image of the Bad drive for me (any ideas on who might be able to do this for me within the budget mentioned?), i will of course image that image so that while i may stuff around as newbies do trying to recover files, the original images will always be backed-up so I can always go back to the professional with both the good and bad disk images and ask them to reconstruct the data. The other thought I have is that after the GOOD drive is backed up (twice) that drive can be used if necessary as a transplant donor for the Bad drive.
If i do want to try to reconstruct the data am I better off doing it from two separate drives or one large drive. Should the drives be 250GB and 250GB or 500GB or does it matter. How hard is it to reconstract the data thats been split across the two drives in RAID0. I have a licensed copy of R-Studio but am willing to buy other software if we can fit the budget.
Thanks to all those who take the time to read my post and especially those that have some advice.
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