accorkie wrote:
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I contacted a data recovery place and they said the more i try to obtain my data the more damage is done? is that true?
That really depends. If the head or disc is damaged, then yes, it will get worse and worse. Physical damage is caused by head/media contact, which is generally caused caused by a few things: the head slider hits debris (dust etc) that is in the drive (shouldn't happen unless something broke off, you took the drive apart, or because of prior internal failure caused by something else), by a failure of the air bearing that the head flies on due to insufficient air pressure or impact, or because of a spindle bearing failure causing movement of the platter relative to the head.
Essentially, what happens where debris is concerned, is that the head (and please don't point out that I am using "head" to refer to both the head and the slider, it really is irrelevant) hits debris and either bounces, causing it to slap the disc, damaging either or both, possibly causing debris to be created (see above), or it can create enough heat to actually burn the head and/or disc. Debris can also be ground into the platter or ground up into smaller debris and spread further by this contact (again, see above, and then multiply exponentially!).
The result of a physical impact is much the same. Head hits disc, head and/or disc burns or is abraised, debris is generated, then proceed as above.
Now, if there is no damage, and you have a corrupted SA, a dead head preamp, or some other electric failure, there's no danger leaving the drive running as long as there it no physical damage (SA problems CAN be caused by physical damage).
Either way, if MHDD scans your drive, you have a logical problem. In that case, the worry is that any writing you do to a logically damaged drive can make it worse. It's best to use a tool that allows you to image that drive without modifying it, then work from a copy of that image (if you screw it up, you can always make another copy). Obviously copying an image takes a lot of space, but it's important if there is a possibility you won't be able to make another image.
This series of drives IS known to be problematic across the board even if Seagate won't acknowledge issues with your particular version of it, and you may have recourse with Seagate, possibly their recovery program will be extended to more versions of that drive, though they haven't been very good about recovering the ones that are acknowledged to be defective.