luis84 wrote:
The error is non existent.
Thanks for trying to help, although you've guessed at the wrong question I was going to ask with that answer.
I'm not promising that this is a complete list, but here are a few initial questions:
- Have you definitely accepted the risks of DIY diagnosis & recovery attempts, including that you could make things worse, or more difficult/expensive for any later professional recovery attempt, or even totally unrecoverable, due to lack of experience, human error, or just bad luck etc., and you accept the responsibility for what happens? Only continue answering my questions if the answer to this is "yes".
- What is the make, model & capacity of the original external drive?
- Is it within its warranty and the case is still unopened - meaning that an RMA / warranty replacement is still an option, and if so, is that option important to you?
- When did this problem of apparent filesystem corruption start? (date/time)
- Did anything unusual happen just before that date/time (e.g. drive was knocked / dropped / transported / powered off without a clean shutdown / borrowed by someone so that you can't be sure what happened / ...)?
- Does the drive make any strange sounds (e.g. squealing / clicking / ticking / clunking etc.)?
- You say that you cloned the original drive to a new drive using dd_rescue. Personally I use GNU ddrescue for this type of DIY, so my dd_rescue knowledge is rusty. Are you confident that
all of the original drive was successfully read? If so, what evidence do you have of that (e.g. dd_rescue logfile, screenshot of successful completion screen with 0kB of errors, something else)?
- You reported the new (clone target) drive was "unreadable". You didn't use that term for the original (clone source) drive. Please explain exactly what
you mean by "unreadable" and explain what error message you saw which told you that the new drive is "unreadable".
- How is that error different from when you were using the original drive (which you didn't call "unreadable")? Your different terminology makes it sound like things are
worse with the new (clone target) drive.

- I don't know if you tried to mount the original drive or the clone (or both) using Linux. You say the filesystem on the drive (whichever it was) would "not mount properly at all". What was the exact command that you entered and what was the exact error message? Unlike with Windows, there will have been one from Linux.

- Do you have
yet another drive, preferably totally unused, but in any case with at least with an empty partition the same size as (or larger than) the original drive, to hold recovered files?