@Tekedon,
Thanks for that info. Your answers are a big surprise.
Tekedon wrote:
Vulcan wrote:
Depending on exactly what you tried, and exactly what errors you got (you didn't give details of this), then it's likely you've proved this is not a DIY recovery
The disc recovery software didn't give any errors, it just didn't find any files.. it was searching sectors for about half an hour and came up with nothing.
Oh! Your earlier comment of "data recovery tools can't access it" unfortunately sounded more like there were actual errors which prevented the disk being accessed - and now you have clarified that.
From your new information, I see no evidence that the disk is actually unreadable, since you say that there are no error messages from recovery s/w.
It is also good that:
Tekedon wrote:
Vulcan wrote:
In the BIOS disk setup screen, what model name & capacity is shown for the disk?
[snip] the correct name and capacity is shown..
[/quote]
Note: There is always a risk in any DIY recovery (or even diagnosis) e.g. due to human error when using a hex editor or when handling a disk, or just bad luck. Therefore you have to decide how much risk you want to take in doing any further analysis.
If I was in this situation, I would be manually looking at the disk with a hex editor, to see if I saw "sanity" e.g. look at the MBR (LBA0) - can I read it; does it look correct; same for the first LBA of the first filesystem (probably LBA63); then I'd look into the filesystem as a quick scan for readable text (which exists within executable files, as well as data files). This is to try to explain 2 seemingly contradictory things you are reporting i.e.:
- no errors reported when data recovery s/w tries to read from the disk;
but
- no files being identified by that recovery software.
One possible reason for both those behaviours, would be if the disk/partition was encrypted - but you haven't mentioned that... Depending exactly how Windows reports the disk, another possiility could be that the disk has been overwritten - but you haven't mentioned that either.
IMHO in order to make progress, more detail would be needed about the history of that disk e.g. how was it being used originally; which OS version; was there any encryption; why did you previously describe it as "crashed" - what actually happened around the time when the "problem" was first seen; have the symptoms changed at all, after anything you have tried so far; exactly which different recovery s/w have you tried.
You said before: "windows says it's working correctly.. but it isn't accessible" - what exactly did you mean by "isn't accessible" e.g. error messages reported or something else? How does Windows report the drive letter(s) on that disk in Device Manager e.g. does it report the filesystem type (NTFS or FAT32), or list it as raw, or show no drive letters on that disk at all, or something else; assuming it shows a drive letter(s) on that disk, does it show this as all free space, or as only some free space or something else?
With all those answers, it
might help to better define the problem you have - but no guarantees.
If you don't feel comfortable taking the inherent risks of DIY to investigate this yourself, then you'll need help from someone more experienced who has the disk in their hand (e.g. a DR pro), to assist. And please don't try any more "internet fixes" like the heating & cooling. Those
might have caused same (further) problems.