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[It isn't clear from your post whether you are trying to recover the original data or not - I think you're not trying to recover the original data, since you are trying so hard to format the drive...]
If the only problem with the drive was that it had been mistakenly "quick formatted", then there would be no problems with formatting it again (or trying to read it). Threfore you have some other kind of problem here, and perhaps your "friend" has not told you the whole story.
Remote diagnosis, as you are requesting here, is difficult or impossible when detailed error messages are not given (and may still be impossible even if they are). You can look in the Windows system event log for some more details of problems detected by Windows when trying to use that to format the disk. There is no such thing as a "DOS NTFS command line". I guess perhaps you meant using a Windows command line, to run the format utility - but perhaps you meant something else.
One easy thing you can try doing, is using another USB cable, in case that is the cause of the problem you are seeing (the specific Windows system event log messages when you try to format the disk may give you a clue about whether this is a USB-related issue, but trying another cable is a cheap / quick elimination you can try.)
A USB-attached disk is more difficult to diagnose, as detailed drive behaviour is hidden from the OS. If your skills / expertise meant that you felt comfortable opening the drive enclosure (losing any warranty in the process), then you could (a) eliminate the enclosure as the source of the problems, and (b) get more detailed error information, by attaching the drive directly via SATA and using utilities like MHDD. However that is not a one click "tell me what's wrong with my drive" utility, and so you would probably need further help to run it and to interpret its results.
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