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Hello,
I came across this site while doing some Google searches after one of my hard drives recently seems to have failed. I've posted on other tech sites I frequent, but it seems there may be more experts here, so I would like to ask if anyone has any advice for my particular situation.
First off, I know I should have backups, but the timing was unfortunate. I was actually in the middle of preparing the data on my PC (spread across 4 HD's) for backup onto a 1.5TB drive I purchased specifically to hold a copy of all my data. The particular drive that failed is a WD5000AAKS-00GYA0 drive. It may have actually failed upwards of a week ago, but I can't be sure. This drive held static, long-term storage files, and as such I rarely needed to access the drive; especially when I was busy sorting files between 2 other, more active, drives. I noticed a couple days ago when I tried to access it that it was missing from Windows (XP.)
At this point, I thought it was maybe a loose connection that may have developed or something, so I rebooted and checked the connections. I noticed that Windows took a lot longer than normal to start up, and once I was in, the drive was still missing from 'My Computer.' I checked device manager, but it didn't see the drive at all; nor did Disk Management. I rebooted again and went into the BIOS. Unfortunately, it wasn't listed there either. While booting up, during the AHCI check (my system is configured to run in AHCI mode, rather than IDE) I noticed that it would say there were 6 ports with 6 devices connected - which is correct - but it was only able to list 5 of the drives, while it timed out waiting for the 6th (the failed drive.) I'm not sure of the significance of this, but after I pulled it out, it would speed through the AHCI check again simply saying 6 ports, 5 connected devices.
At this point, I'm not sure what's going on. I have an external USB/eSATA enclosure, so I decided to try it in there to rule out a faulty cable/SATA port.
I first connected it via USB to my laptop (PC was down while I took out the HD) and I can confirm it still turns on and spins up. I also did not hear any obvious clicking or other weird noises besides a bit of seek noise initially; that would go away and I'd be left with just the whirring/hum of the platters spinning. My laptop attempted to install drivers for the USB device, and it briefly showed up detected as a WD50 00AAKS (not sure why there was a space) but that was as far as it got; it wouldn't assign a drive letter, so I couldn't access it.
Next, I booted my PC and connected the enclosure to my PC via eSATA. This time, device manager picked up an unknown "Disk" but that was it. I checked the event manager and there were a lot of log entries, starting with
The device, \Device\Harddisk5\D, is not ready for access yet.
and then lots of
The device, \Device\Scsi\Jraid1, did not respond within the timeout period.
Each time I get the second message, the entire system pauses, I assume because it's still waiting for the drive.
I then tried connecting it to USB instead, and as with the laptop, new hardware wizard will pop up and find the WD5000AAKS, but then fail to initialize it. This doesn't cause my system to pause, but I do hear the drive spin up, then suddenly spin down and spin back up again. Event manager logs the following during this:
The device, \Device\Harddisk5\D, is not ready for access yet.
followed by
The device 'Disk drive' (SCSI\Disk&Ven_WDC&Prod_WD5000AAKS-00YGA&Rev_210.\5&2cfd9831&0&010) disappeared from the system without first being prepared for removal.
In either case, disk management could not pick it up.
The model of the drive is a WD5000AAKS-00GYA0, but when I plugged it in via USB, it briefly came up and claimed it was an -00GYA2. From some Googling around, it seems this may be some sort of firmware/circuit board issue, but I'm not exactly sure. I do have another working WD5000AAKS-00GYA0, as I ordered 2 of them from Newegg at the same time (although I'll probably replace all of them now) but I'm not sure how identical or different they are, or if I should even bother attempting a PCB transplant. The drive itself is still covered under WD warranty, so I can RMA it, but I'd like to see if I can at least recover the data first, before sending it in. I have looked at data recovery companies but their prices are really quite high for a home user; I can see it being OK on a business level though. At the low end of about $500, I can maybe do, but from what I can tell, people claim it's normally in the $1000-1500 range.
In any case, does anyone have any advice on what to do?
Thanks in advance.
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