Not a DIY home job.  Opening a drive should only be done in a clean room by people wearing "bunny suits".  Otherwise, microscopic
dust particles will get in and cause serious crashes almost immediately.  None of it is easy and every step requires a
super-delicate touch.. especially handling the heads to get them off the old platters and onto the new.  This is why it's
expensive..


Chuck
  -----Original Message-----
  From: tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org [mailto:tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org]On Behalf Of Subramanya Sastry
  Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2007 5:31 PM
  To: Chris Barber
  Cc: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
  Subject: Re: [tclug-list] [Off-Topic?] recovering data from a hard drivewith mechanical failure


  I called them a few minutes back.  They charge $100 for evaluation and then give me a list of all files and folders that they
recover ... I was told that the mechanical failure recovery costs anywhere between $900 - $1900 ... So, I decided it is not worth
it.

  Thanks for the tip regarding swapping mechanical components ... I wonder how hard/easy that is ... I might be willing to give it a
try if I could lay my hand on a spare drive ..

  Subbu.


  On 10/2/07, Chris Barber <stuff at cb1inc.com> wrote:
    Lucky for you Kroll Ontrack is located in Eden Prairie and they are data recovery specialists.  Not lucky for you because they
are not cheap.  Last time I heard they charge based on the amount of data they recover.  In the event of a hardware failure, one of
their strategies is to track down the same drive model and swap the mechanical components.

    There web address is: http://www.ontrackdatarecovery.com.  If you do use them, I'd be curious how they are?  Expensive?
Accurately?  Timely?

    -Chris


    Subramanya Sastry wrote:
      Hi folks,

      I just had the misfortune of having my hard drive crash on me ... it seems like a mechanical failure ... horrible clicking
noises ...

      There is some data on there that I haven't backed up recently, plus, I had used this drive as a backup for data on some other
hard drive ... while this is not catastrophic data loss, I was wondering if folks had any suggestions for recovering data in the
face of mechanical failure ... or what it might cost if I paid some service for data recovery in the twin cities.

      It is a ext3 file system .. though not sure that matters ...

      Thanks,
      Subbu.
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