arebaba wrote:
I can understand that due to the technical work this kind of repair can be expensive, even more expensive than the original product, but to charge around 10x more than the original product its not a good thing...
It is understandable to have such a view, but understand that hard drives are designed for a consumer environment, and competition has driven prices down. This does not make hard drives any less complex. There are three major factors that drive data recovery prices up:
1) Hard drives are much more complex then people think
2) While there is a school to become a surgeon, or a lawyer, there is no school in existence for data recovery. Some may offer short courses that give you a "push start", but from then on it is all about doing your own research and development with your own funds, and teaching yourself. Some failures can take literally thousands of working hours to discover a remedy for.
3) Proprietary equipment is not cheap. While there are commercial solutions that cost even greater then $10000 USD, there is also equipment that technicians design and develop in house, using their own funds to create prototypes and fabrications. Alot of money is burned creating new tools that give the technician the ability to perform fixes on drives such as yours. (The platters have to be moved, and you cant just take them out one by one, or grab them all with your hand. It is much more advanced then this)
I hope this gives you some understanding of why recovery prices for these types failures are high priced.
Regards,