These drives are difficult to deal with, often even minor scratches on this architecture can make a recovery very challenging. I don't know about the abilities of Data Rescue(not familiar), but at least the other two companies are reputable. While it is true that some companies have more expertise and that different companies will have various strengths and weaknesses because they have spent an excessive amount of time doing R&D on a specific hard drive architecture, SSD controller or RAID type, etc... I would say that if it is truly as bad as mentioned by the companies, chances for even a partial recovery will be very slim.
sakhan329 wrote:
I just don't understand how data is able to be retrieved from drives that have been in all sorts of situations but this drive that I made sure to move only if I absolutely had to has THIS much damage that deems it unrecoverable...
When you hear about spectacular recoveries from flood / water damage , fire ,etc... it usually sounds very impressive, but in most cases the platters are still intact. Platter damage is usually the worst type of failure, and a slight bump to the drive can sometimes be the initiator for severe media damage. To give you an example, we have recovered data from fire in multiple situations where things looked a lot worst then they are in the end. We have recovered data from laptops that have been smashed with baseball bats, run over by cars, etc... but we have also had cases where a simple bump to a hard drive while powered on (important factor) has caused the heads to make contact with the platters and damaging both primary and secondary service area, leaving the data unrecoverable.
sakhan329 wrote:
Would a spinstand be helpful in this situation??
Unfortunately it would not. This is a high density hard drive, nothing to be done here with a spinstand.
Not trying to be a pessimist here, just trying to help.
P.S. With that being said there are a few individuals who specialize in difficult recovery cases, where others have failed. If you don't mind sending the drive to Europe you can also contact Pepe.
Good luck and hope you can get some of your data recovered!