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Resurrecting Dead Harddrives?

Broue Master asks: "The main harddrive of a friend's computer stopped working. He described to me that the computer began by emitting strange 'scratching sounds', and after a while, it made a 'loud *tock* sound' and stopped. He tried to reboot it but soon realized that the harddrive wasn't spinning anymore. He asked me if I could revive it, at least long enough so that he could retrieve at least his "my documents" folder. The computer was running XP. I did a little googling(tm) of my own to find out that the most recommended solution out there seems to be 'freezing' the harddrive for a day in a ziplock bag. I'd like to know what fellow Slashdot readers have done in the past to try and resurrect dead harddrives and if the freezing method would still be a good idea, today. The harddrive is a Samsung 30Gb." A good 95% of the time, once an HD is gone, break out the shovel, because it's time to bury it. Still, it would be interesting to note, if only from an anecdotal standpoint, if any of you have managed to perform such miracle hardware resurrections. Have you managed to revive a dead and decaying drive from the dead long enough to pull data off of it? If so, what did you do?

5 of 161 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Drop trick by innosent · · Score: 4, Funny

    True, if the data is important, don't touch it, send it to the professionals. If it's just your porn collection, break out the sledgehammer, at best, you'll get your data back, at worst, and most likely, you'll have fun hitting a drive with a hammer.

    --
    --That's the point of being root, you can do anything you want, even if it's stupid.
  2. Freezer Believer by candl · · Score: 5, Funny

    I had a dead drive that I kept around for a year just in case some miracle recovery cure came up. Sure enough I heard about the freezing thing and six months ago broke out the HD, stuck it in a plastic bag (in hopes of tricking any condensation into adhering to the other surface) and threw it in the freezer while I went and "prepped my system" for getting a drive in and fired up asap.

    On the first attempt I had put the drive in the freezer for only about 20 minutes (hey, I was anxious) and it fired up. I browsed to the drive's directory before it crapped out on me, but I knew I was close. So the drive went back in the freezer while I thought of plan B.

    On the Second attempt I left the drive chill for 45 minutes and this time when I took it out, I brought it out on a frozen gel pack. I was able to get all my data w/o condensation or other complications.

    I'd like to say that my data was fine, but somewhere along the line my poetry and stories really started to really suck. It must have been corrupted at some point because I swear it was better when I wrote it. Hopefully your data will retain it's value...

  3. Re:Freeze first, then by DA-MAN · · Score: 4, Funny

    Cryogenically freeze it now and maybe in thirty or fourty years it will be cheap to take it to a data recovery company, cure what ails it and what not.

    --
    Can I get an eye poke?
    Dog House Forum
  4. fiery re-entry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    no, no: "voila" is the *metric* spelling. in america it is "walah".

    it's people like you who cause spacecraft to fail.

  5. Re:Mine is dead right now by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 4, Funny

    Perhaps he meant "wallah" or "walla," the Hindi suffix for "one who does" or "one who deals with." Its' a good suffix for creating descriptive terms: the taxiwallah is a synonym for "cabbie," the rickshawwallah is the poor guy who carries the rickshaw, while the datawallah is the guy who flips bits for you when you write code.

    Perhaps the grandparent reference is to the "platterwallah," who spins up hard drives for the upper castes. Incidentally, while they may sound similar, the platterwallahs don't like being confused for dishwallahs, as they don't clean dishes.

    --
    Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
    www.fogbound.net