Question:
Is possible to recovery data in crash Hard Disk?
Phea
2009-11-27 07:11:37 UTC
hello,

I have a problem and want all of you to help me.
hmm... I have tried to format my hard disk drive, but unable to format coz damage hard disk...

I still want to ask the same question, is it possible to to recovery data in crash hard disk? if possible, so how? Do you know any program to recovery data in crash hard disk? if you know please tell me..........

thank you for your time
Six answers:
coolhead
2009-11-27 07:40:18 UTC
Yea its quite possible

try the s/w http://hotfile.com/dl/17706749/f6b034f/Power_Data_Recovery_4.1.1_pro.rar.html

but u may not be able to completely restore the lost data..!

U cannot be sure of recovery!..

good luck..
2016-04-06 07:55:34 UTC
In general, when a hard disk fails, it simply "wears out" the moving parts. There is NO recovery from worn bearings without a professional service getting involved. What a professional recovery service will do is recreate the drive from the parts into another drive. In other words, in a clean room as the manufacturer did, they will take the platters and head assembly from your drive and put them into a brand new drive of the exact same model as you have. This is very labor intensive because of the manual labor AND the "clean" area in which the work is done. New drive, your old platters. OK, so at this point, it MAY be possible to READ the entire contents of your drive onto a completely separate new drive. THAT costs a lot of money because of the man-hours of labor involved and is NOT something that YOU as an end user can DO. How much is this data worth to you? This kind of data recovery service gets really expensive, really fast. That said, does the drive "spin up" when energized? When you turn the power on, with your fingers on the drive case, you should FEEL a small amount of vibration from the platter servo motor as it starts itself up; then you should feel the heads move as the drive performs an internal test. If you feel and hear these things, it MAY be possible to salvage the data. Install this drive as a second drive in another computer. And then see what you can do with it. Try to run SCANDISK or any other disk utility program you might have. It is remote, but possible that SCANDISK can "fix" the problem IF it is related to the directory and file system on disk. No guarantees. It could also be that the disk is simply "there" and you can then copy off the files elsewhere. It is worth a try at least...
sosguy
2009-11-27 07:23:28 UTC
If you have damaged sectors on the hard drive and are unable to format, you are pretty much sunk unless you want to pay lots of money for a professional recovery.

One thing you may want to try, however, and I have had moderate success using this method, is to download a free copy of Ubuntu (operating system). You can download the ISO and burn it to a CD. From there - the CD is bootable - run the "live" version on a different partition of the hard drive. You may be able to run the "live" version and see the contents of the damaged partition - from there you can copy what you need to a portable storage device.

For more complete instructions see this site:

http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows-vista/use-ubuntu-live-cd-to-backup-files-from-your-dead-windows-computer/
Anna K. P
2009-11-28 14:07:17 UTC
There are many softwares out there but Uneraser and Data Recovery Wizard sounds pretty good one with reputation. But again, it's just one of those good ones so you might want to do some research..

I'd suggest to go online and search for data recovery software vendors who provide this service first. Usually they don't charge for initial consultations.
Cassandra
2009-11-27 07:33:35 UTC
Yes it is possible.



You need a specilist Data Recovery company.



Google data recovery or something similar



Be sitting down when you listen to the cost!!
the_wise
2009-11-27 07:19:11 UTC
no, if it a physical failure..like if u broke th actual hard-drive...is all over...



but there are some programs..look on the internet...that recover software failures


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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