I've read stories of manufacturers "technical" solution to stiction
involving lifting the computer a couple inches from the desk, and dropping
it.

 
Phillip Partipilo
Parametric Solutions Inc.
Jupiter, Florida
(561) 747-6107
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Alverson, Tom (Xetron) [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 4:11 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Cheap recovery for dead HD?



Thanks for all the replies.  If it would spin up I have Ontracks
recovery tools that could get whatever data was there.  I guess the
freezer is worth a try, but I thought that was more for old school
drives where the heads were not lining up with the tracks any more.  For
this drive, the failure to spin would have to be one of several things:
Bad controller board that drives the motor (If I had an identical drive
I could try swapping the board); bad motor; frozen motor bearings; or
"Stiction" where the heads become stuck to the platters.  I ran across a
bad case of "stiction" long ago with an ST-225 (remember those?).  On
this drive you could actually try to spin the motor from outside the
drive.  I turned real hard with my fingers until the platters finally
broke loose.  When I powered it up after that I heard clunk clunk clunk
clunk clunk....   I took the drive apart and one of the heads was still
stuck to the platter and had ripped loose of the head arm.  Good thing
there was no valuable data on that drive.

-----Original Message-----
From: Angus Scott-Fleming [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 27, 2010 11:43 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Cheap recovery for dead HD?

On 26 Jan 2010 at 14:26, Alverson, Tom (Xetron)  wrote:

>     A friend has an external Seagate 1TB drive that died on them and
it has
> the only copy of a lot of the photos they took. I took the USB
enclosure
> apart and connected the SATA drive up directly to a PC, but the motor
does
> not spin at all (you can hear the heads move some at power up). She
took it
> to a local shop where they said it would cost $300 to recover the
data, but
> then changed that to $1000 when they found out it was a "large" drive
> (1TB).
>     
>     Does anyone know of a good affordable place that will do this?
Their
> pictures are not worth $1000 at this point.

Try the freezer trick, it worked for me once.

Also, spinrite (grc.com, $89, 30-day moneyback guarantee if it doesn't
help) 
can sometimes help IF the drive will spin up.

Ontrack data recovery (google 'em) will give estimates by email.

--
Angus Scott-Fleming
GeoApps, Tucson, Arizona
1-520-290-5038
+-----------------------------------+




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