@Pokaholic:
Pokaholic wrote:
the computer hung up on the bios screen, then said there was a hard drive error.
If you accept the risk that any DIY carries some risk of the drive deteriorating, then I would attempt to get a better diagnosis than the BIOS is giving you. A "hard drive error" could be anything from media errors (where a DIY data recovery attempt may be possible, although has some risk), through to disk firmware, heads or something else not DIY (as
BlackST mentioned).
The same ambiguity applies to this info:
Pokaholic wrote:
I ended up pulling the hard drive and testing it on my laptop with a USB connection and the system wouldn't recognize it.
Unfortunately "the system wouldn't recognize it" could mean different things.
To get an idea of how the drive identifies itself (disk model & capacity), you would need to put the disk back into the PC and attach it via SATA again. Then either look in the disk setup screen in your BIOS (is the drive model & capacity shown correctly there?), or use the MHDD tool (downloading the bootable ISO image from the files area of this forum is probably easiest to use, but can still require some BIOS settings to be changed before it will detect SATA disks).
After you have decided on the value of the non-backed up data, and whether you want to take the risk of attempting any diagnosis yourself (compared to getting a diagnosis from a DR company, but losing control of your disk in the process - and you need to use a reputable company), then that'll make your options a bit clearer.