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Date:      Sat, 14 Oct 2017 10:14:26 +0000
From:      Carmel NY <carmel_ny@outlook.com>
To:        FreeBSD <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: How to recover data from dead hard drive.
Message-ID:  <BN6PR2001MB1730D947FADA3A9DC9A370A480490@BN6PR2001MB1730.namprd20.prod.outlook.com>
In-Reply-To: <72772933-C642-43DB-AFD6-6B5D40EEF39E@fjl.co.uk>
References:  <59DBA387.4050108@gmail.com> <20171009191435.145c9dd2.freebsd@edvax.de> <72772933-C642-43DB-AFD6-6B5D40EEF39E@fjl.co.uk>

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On Fri, 13 Oct 2017 12:03:11 +0100, Frank Leonhardt (m) stated:

>Good list that. ddrescue is, IME, the place to start. Or have I confused i=
t
>with dd_rescue again :-)
>
>But what do you mean by dead? If its not spinning or not recognized by the
>system as existing, you'll get nowhere with software. I transplant the
>platters to a new IDENTICAL drive mechanism and work from that. You can by=
 an
>identical drive from companies who stock samples them "just in case".
>Unsurprisingly, they're not cheap. And transferring platters is not easy.
>
>I also have some expensive licensed software for recovering incomplete fil=
e
>systems, and charge Windows users like a wounded rhinoceros when they need
>their data back.

Years ago, I used "Spinrite" to recover a damaged drive. It worked better t=
han
anything else on the market, at least for me, at the time. I don't think it
has been maintained in over a decade though.

Personally, I fail to understand why anyone with any "mission critical"
system would not be using some form of RAID. It doesn't make any sense to m=
e.
Even my Laptop is configured to automatically back up data to a cloud servi=
ce.
Even if the drive went south, I could restore all of my data.

--=20
Carmel



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