I have a hard drive that has crashed and is no longer recognized by the computer on start up
Is there any way I can do something to it to coax it back on, one last time?
What about the possibility of getting files off of it?
I would appreciate help on this!
thanks
i've hard about freezing them, and i was going to try that tomorrow
i won't pay thousands of dollars to recover an 80 gig disk
i wouldn't mind paying for the software... how do i know which problem i have?
It's not worth your time to try to coax files off the drive. Just restore from your backup.I have a hard drive that has crashed and is no longer recognized by the computer on start up
Is there any way I can do something to it to coax it back on, one last time?
What about the possibility of getting files off of it?
It's not worth your time to try to coax files off the drive. Just restore from your backup.
it doesn't make any noisethanks
i've hard about freezing them, and i was going to try that tomorrow
i won't pay thousands of dollars to recover an 80 gig disk
i wouldn't mind paying for the software... how do i know which problem i have?
Usually the hard drive is smoking or makes loud noises with the "Hardware" problem.
Usually the hard drive sounds normal but files are corrupted or the OS won't load with the "Software" problem.
Actually, I did have a back up policy, and I do keep most of what is important backed up... but I can't find the back up CD I madeIt's not worth your time to try to coax files off the drive. Just restore from your backup.
Hah! Something tells me in this instance that doesn't exist...
I had a drive failure in my iBook about a month outside of warranty. Warning signs were increased load times and it started making a mechanical "clonking" sound during these load times. I did a search and found this was likely a bearing failure. I promptly backed my stuff up to CD; within a day or two the system wouldn't boot any more.
I did manage to get a final few files off it by booting from CD and manually mounting it, but this was a fluke. When I sent it for repair I requested the old disk as well and tried putting it in an external enclosure, but that was the end; it was unmountable, so I took a hammer to it and smashed it to bits for "data security reasons."
If the drive is at all accessible, try booting with some kind of recovery CD; it's possible the OS parts of the disk are problematic (I'm assuming it's your primary boot device), but you may be able to access it if you have some other means of booting the computer.
If you didn't have a backup policy before, this should spur you to make one. Even if it's just a CD-ROM burn every month, it's better than nothing. I have two 300GB disks in a two-disk enclosure that does hardware RAID and have them configured as a mirror. I've put all our photos and music files on there and it's plugged into my Airport and configured as an airdisk. At least once a month I try to remember to do a backup of my email and any new photos my wife has taken. Gives me some piece of mind.
So, I should slave the broken drive and boot it off of the new one I set up and see if that turns on?It's very possible that the only damage is to the MBR, the master boot record, and 99% of the drive is fine. Put in your Windows disk to boot, and run the recovery console and /fixmbr and you should be bootable.
That suggests that it may not be a hardware failure. Unless, of course it makes no noise at all--i.e. it doesn't even spin up when the computer turns on.it doesn't make any noise
I had a bad power supply a couple years ago, I would come home and the computer would have shut itself off. The psu had then cooled and the capacitors discharged, when I turned it on it would try to boot.So, I should slave the broken drive and boot it off of the new one I set up and see if that turns on?It's very possible that the only damage is to the MBR, the master boot record, and 99% of the drive is fine. Put in your Windows disk to boot, and run the recovery console and /fixmbr and you should be bootable.
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