CopyPasta from another forum (3rd time lucky i hope)
Post 1:Hi guys/gals
My name is Brendan from Sydney Australia.
I'm hoping you might be able to give me some guidance/advice for a raid0 recovery I am trying to do.
Probably what was very silly of me, (not sure if this is my cause) but I had a drive failure about a month ago (maybe from over heating - not letting the HDD go to sleep over about 12 hours) first thing I tried was the freezer method... which lead to some grinding noises (for a second or three) as apposed to the normal clicking sound.
I have a matching parts drive so I can do a head swap, however I have inspected the platters and there is a large gouge in the SA area (2.5" drive) on both sides I assume of the top platter (2 platters, 4 heads) there also appears to be a score on about 1mm by ~3mm long on the inner area of the platter on both raid0 disks... however only one is not being recognised... so I'm not sure if the latter is an issue or not.

I was of course worried that if I was to change the heads over, the new heads will be destroyed when it passes over the SA area if I can even get it to work using the live board swap method... and there appears to be a little bit of very fine metallic dust around the scoring... So I'm guessing it would be nice to try to image the drive from the outside of the platter ==> and then in towards the SA area... However I am not sure of ZARs capabilities.
I was just wondering what would be the best course of action would be? Is the platter surface cleanable with some sort of technique/electrical contact cleaner spray? Or just try to rip the images directly without trying to clean using ddrescue or some other software? though I am a little unsure what I can do with imaging drives in raid0 as I have been told by symantec ghost cant even image a raid0 array without both drives operational ( a little useless it seems)... but I was wondering if you guys could point me in the right direction with what software I should try to use.
I have uploaded some photos online to a website i frequent.
http://www.stereo.net.au/forums/show...guru-s-on-hereBest Regards
Brendan
Post 2:Thanks for the reply guys
I was reading on the net last night that there are machines that can pull apart a platter and repair the scratches by spraying a micro sized material... and that allows the surface to allow a new head to glide right over the top without crashing on the rough surface. These machines cost about 5k approx.
Would you guys know where I could send my drive to repair the scratch where I can complete my data recovery?
I was thinking about using ddrescue, but there is another program called dd_rescue... and I'm a little unsure what one I should use. As far as I know, its only for linux platforms, and I've never actualy downloaded or even used linux before... could someone maybe point me in the right direction regarding this?
What I was planning to do, to get the drive online, is I'd try a live board swap. I'd let my raid0 disk 1 (good) go to sleep then I would change the boards over to the damaged drive while its sleeping... apparently this allows the SA area to be loaded into memory, so this should allow me to scan the drive... or so I believe... though I'm not too sure if thats bogus or not.
I made an image of my good raid0 disk and saved it to a 2TB drive using zlon, but I'm unsure if i need to use zar or dd rescue on either of the drives after I do the board swap.
Is it possible to repair a raid0 array when its loaded as an image or does it have to be hardware only?
Best Regards
Brendan
Post 3:question about boards and live board swaps
raid0 drive (2x 500gb 2.5" drives) [diskA=good,diskB=scratched SA area + dead head] i also have a seperate parts drive
after new head install~
if I was to swap the boards over and get diskB board live and load diskA SA area, then put to sleep, then replace diskB (now diskB is matching with boardB) in order to do an image recovery... using ddrecovery or zar?
is this far fetched?
regards
Brendan
Post 4:Is it possible to repair the damaged surface finish on the platter to allow a new head to glide over it (i've read there is a machine that can seperate the platters and spray a film of material in the locations of the scratches)
are there no other solutions to this?
is it all just a pipe dream? is it just a really well kept secret?
if all above answers are 'yes' then is there a company who can just do that job? how much would they be charging? I wouldn't imagine it would be very labour intensive...
Super Thanks in advance
Brendan