I thought it was a mobo problem since it was very old and my deskstar
though 2 years old (from sitting around on a shelf), had few miles on
it.
New memory & 2600 athlon chip was added to the mobo and things seemed
ok for a day or two. Then the problems returned. I did an advanced
check on the drive with the IBM drive check program I d/led, but that
showed the drive to be OK.
Well, it wasn't! Next day at work when I booted up the drive began
making noises, kind of a staccato 1-2-3-4 - - - - - (repeat every 1
second) scratchy sound.
Sometimes the drive wasn't even recognized. Sometimes it was. But
windows wouldn't start.
I had backed up much of my important data earlier. But just before all
this began happenening I was working on a project that was very time
intensive. I need the data back.
Some questions:
1) are there software programs that can help me recover my data? I put
in a new drive (non-IBM !!) and installed WinXP on it and put my IBM
in as primary slave, but windows won't read it (it wants to format it)
2) Is there any hope of recovering my work if I go with a professional
data recovery company?
3) How much do they charge for something like this? All I need is one
or two files, or is it a full recovery of the whole disk kind of
thing?
4) If the pros are the way to go, can anyone recommend any? This is
the first time for me with a problem like this. I don't know where to
begin.
Thanks.
The bios DOES recognize the drive. IBM's check utility now says there
are errors and asks if I want to reformat the drive.
On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 16:08:25 GMT, Bee...@nospam.net wrotF:
"An Ontrack Data Recovery Service specialist will be contacting you
shortly to provide you with a customized data recovery service
solution. As a general guideline, a typical price for a recovery
service based on the information you submitted would range from $700
US to $2300 US for our Standard (non-emergency) Service. Actual
pricing will vary based on the media capacity, system type, nature and
severity of the data loss, level of damage, service level and
resources required to recover the data."
Yikes! You can buy an awful lot of back-up software and external
harddrive space for $700-$2300.
On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 16:37:18 GMT, Bee...@nospam.net wrotF:
> "An Ontrack Data Recovery Service specialist will be contacting you
> shortly to provide you with a customized data recovery service
> solution. As a general guideline, a typical price for a recovery
> service based on the information you submitted would range from $700
> US to $2300 US for our Standard (non-emergency) Service. Actual
> pricing will vary based on the media capacity, system type, nature and
> severity of the data loss, level of damage, service level and
> resources required to recover the data."
> Yikes! You can buy an awful lot of back-up software and external
> harddrive space for $700-$2300.
Yes. But not that many recovery engineer hours. Maybe up to 20.
Arno
--
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"The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws" - Tacitus
Note that it was not necessary to open the drive case; I would imagine that
would cost much more. You might try someone local first. Keep in mind that
even if they don't open the drive, simply running it could be destructive
and destroy data permanently. If you only need certain files you might ket
lucky, as I did.
Bill
<Bee...@nospam.net> wrote in message
news:cjftov0g6o4r4016t...@4ax.com...
>4) If the pros are the way to go, can anyone recommend any? This is
>the first time for me with a problem like this. I don't know where to
>begin.
Hmmm. Based on your symptoms, you need to ask if it might be more
valuable to repeat that time intensive task rather than spend upwards of
$1000. It sounds like you're dealing with a physical problem, which will
probably require an opening of the drive, with all that entails (white
room, etc.) That's expensive.
If it were a software issue, there are recovery programs and if it is a
simple hardware issue (power falure, control card failure), the
professionals can do it much cheaper. Your's doesn't sound like it will
be simple.
-Tim
You pay all delivery costs.
Odie
odie_ferrous on a hot mail account
"Odie Ferrous" <odie_f...@blotmail.com> wrote in message
news:3F946F35...@blotmail.com...
| Get it over to me in the UK and I'll do it for under £100.
|
| You pay all delivery costs.
|
| Odie
|
Odie
The drive is obviously dying, if it isn't dead already.
If the drive is still recognized in the BIOS, then your last chance to recover
the data on it is by cloning the drive and then recover your stuff of the clone.
Don't use the drive until ready for cloning as you are draining what's left of
it to death!
CloneDisk software is available from http://resq.co.il/resq.php and costs $25 to
license.
Regards, Zvi
--
NetZ Computing Ltd. ISRAEL www.invircible.com www.ivi.co.il (Hebrew)
InVircible Virus Defense Solutions, ResQ and Data Recovery Utilities
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