Recommendations on a data recovery service..??
Recommendations on a data recovery service..??
The hard drive in my wife's (desktop) computer just bit the dust. I removed it, put it in another computer as D, tried running scandisk, got an error that the FAT was corrupted & it couldn't proceed, tried other things... no luck. Now, I can't see the drive from a (true) DOS prompt, but the BIOS sees the drive (but gives an error message during boot). Now, scandisk won't even start up.
I just want the data from one directory. Any suggestions on who/where to have this done? Also, should I worry about the few passwords which are on the drive, in other directories (for internet access, etc.)
Drive is a 30GB Western Digital, formatted as FAT32, with WIN98SE. Or is there still some hope I can read this drive myself?
Thanks.
I just want the data from one directory. Any suggestions on who/where to have this done? Also, should I worry about the few passwords which are on the drive, in other directories (for internet access, etc.)
Drive is a 30GB Western Digital, formatted as FAT32, with WIN98SE. Or is there still some hope I can read this drive myself?
Thanks.
TP360 • TP365x • i1452 • TP T42 • Intellistation Z Pro
Take a look at this page from the Absolute Raleigh site:
http://www.absoluteraleigh.com/services ... overy.html
If they can do it in house, you're not going to beat the price. If not, OnTrack has been around for a long time. Their price, however, appears to have gone up a whole lot since the mid 1980's. The question will then become how much (in $) do you really need the data?
http://www.absoluteraleigh.com/services ... overy.html
If they can do it in house, you're not going to beat the price. If not, OnTrack has been around for a long time. Their price, however, appears to have gone up a whole lot since the mid 1980's. The question will then become how much (in $) do you really need the data?
I used to be an anarchist but I quit because there were too many rules
I GOT IT!!
Through trial-and-error I came up with this: Put bad drive on primary IDE channel as "master." Set drive jumpers to "single." Boot from WIN98SE boot floppy into DOS. Now, I can see the files on the bad hard drive from the A: prompt. (Any other combination of settings rendered the bad drive as unreadable.)
Load DOS drivers for parallel-port ZIP from floppy. From the A: prompt, Use DOS 'copy' command to copy files from bad drive to the ZIP. Done! All the file names were truncated to 8 characters, but that's OK. So, I'm pleased... almost as pleased as if I had done regular backups of my wife's hard drive in the first place.
Question: Assuming I can re-format the bad drive (and lose ALL files, of course), do you think it's OK to use it again? Or, is it likely to fail again? I've NEVER had a hard drive fail before...
Through trial-and-error I came up with this: Put bad drive on primary IDE channel as "master." Set drive jumpers to "single." Boot from WIN98SE boot floppy into DOS. Now, I can see the files on the bad hard drive from the A: prompt. (Any other combination of settings rendered the bad drive as unreadable.)
Load DOS drivers for parallel-port ZIP from floppy. From the A: prompt, Use DOS 'copy' command to copy files from bad drive to the ZIP. Done! All the file names were truncated to 8 characters, but that's OK. So, I'm pleased... almost as pleased as if I had done regular backups of my wife's hard drive in the first place.
Question: Assuming I can re-format the bad drive (and lose ALL files, of course), do you think it's OK to use it again? Or, is it likely to fail again? I've NEVER had a hard drive fail before...
I'll have to remember this. I've got one of those parallel port zip drives around somewhere.
Given what you had happen, I wouldn't count on the hard drive lasting much longer. but, if you've got reliable zip disks you can do regular backups. It's certainly a lot cheaper than data recovery.
A friend of mine says there are 2 kinds of motorcycle riders: those who have fallen and those who will fall. There are 2 kinds of computer users: those who have had a hard failure and those who will.
Welcome to the club.
Given what you had happen, I wouldn't count on the hard drive lasting much longer. but, if you've got reliable zip disks you can do regular backups. It's certainly a lot cheaper than data recovery.
A friend of mine says there are 2 kinds of motorcycle riders: those who have fallen and those who will fall. There are 2 kinds of computer users: those who have had a hard failure and those who will.
Welcome to the club.
I used to be an anarchist but I quit because there were too many rules
Thanks, I'm happy to be a new member!dsvochak wrote:There are 2 kinds of computer users: those who have had a hard failure and those who will.
Welcome to the club.
A final question... do you think it's possible that the hard drive failure (perhaps a corruption of the FAT) could have been due to a virus? My wife's computer has Norton Anti-Virus (not the "best" I know, but still credible) which is updated and scanned frequently, and she only goes to "friendly" sites... ?? (BTW, the drive is 5 years old...)
Anything is possible, but in your case I would tend to doubt it. If you delete all existing partitions, create a new partition, and format the hard drive successfully, maybe a virus was the culprit.leoblob wrote:A final question... do you think it's possible that the hard drive failure (perhaps a corruption of the FAT) could have been due to a virus? My wife's computer has Norton Anti-Virus (not the "best" I know, but still credible) which is updated and scanned frequently, and she only goes to "friendly" sites... ?? (BTW, the drive is 5 years old...)
Following are a couple of hard drive testing programs that may give a clue.
Hitachi Drive Fitness Test
Fujitsu Drive Fitness Test
DKB
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