yes it is something with hardware, if you have good tech guy who can find same hdd with good mechanical parts, think he can repair it for you no prob ... thats what my friend is doing for me ... have luck
yes it is something with hardware, if you have good tech guy who can find same hdd with good mechanical parts, think he can repair it for you no prob ... thats what my friend is doing for me ... have luck
Actually if the problem is internal (and usually clicking is internal mechanics failing) it will have to be repaired in a "clean room" which most repair places do NOT have as they are quite expensive to maintain with the micron level air filtering that needs to be done. It is usually a specialized repair as mentioned above and the cost could run that high.
I recommend using your back ups with a new HD and if the data was not backed up then you will indeed need the services of a data recovery expert. Good luck!
Actually if the problem is internal (and usually clicking is internal mechanics failing) it will have to be repaired in a "clean room" which most repair places do NOT have as they are quite expensive to maintain with the micron level air filtering that needs to be done. It is usually a specialized repair as mentioned above and the cost could run that high.
I recommend using your back ups with a new HD and if the data was not backed up then you will indeed need the services of a data recovery expert. Good luck!
oh ok i understand, looks like i had another problem then dont think my friend have micron level air filtering room
Yes, it's failing. Stop using it and copy it over to a new HDD with Norton Ghost. Stick your HDD in the freezer for 10-15 minutes before you start copying.
I Hate HDDs failing. If I had a buck for every HDD that's failed over the years I'd have at least enough to get a keg of beer and a family sized pizza.
Yes, it's failing. Stop using it and copy it over to a new HDD with Norton Ghost. Stick your HDD in the freezer for 10-15 minutes before you start copying.
i read that freezing thing is an old wives tail. i do not think will copy.
when i have time i may see if it will plug into my laptop using a hd box thing.
The clicking you are hearing is a really bad sign. Inside your hard drive is a similar setup to a Vinyl record turntable, but much smaller and with much more precision. The arm that holds the "needle" is either damaged or out of calibration or alignment and is not going where it's supposed to go. Each click is potentially damaging it further. It is unlikely that other software is going to allow you to read it, since you don't have a software problem you have a hardware malfunction, so unless its being caused by software AND the current damage is not too severe, software isn't going to fix it.
It's like your car is broken down and you think a different driver might be able to get it to run.
- As soon as I think up a good sig it's going here.
I Hate HDDs failing. If I had a buck for every HDD that's failed over the years I'd have at least enough to get a keg of beer and a family sized pizza.
Good luck with it!
I only use Western Digital Black HDDs and they have been extremely reliable. IMO, they're definitely worth the extra money.
Originally posted by DVTimes
i read that freezing thing is an old wives tail. i do not think will copy.
when i have time i may see if it will plug into my laptop using a hd box thing.
Old wives have tails?
Yes, it does work. An electrical engineer taught me that trick. Again, it's just to keep the HDD working long enough to retrieve the data.
a) stop buying seagate drives
b) I've found in 90% of cases I've been able to get it to come up "just one more time" to copy shit off. Except in RAID and enterprise environments.
“Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants. We know more about war than we know about peace, more about killing than we know about living. If we continue to develop our technology without wisdom or prudence, our servant may prove to be our executioner.” ― Omar Bradley (1948)
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