[CentOS] External harddisk

Thu Oct 1 16:03:34 UTC 2020
Bruce Ferrell <bferrell at baywinds.org>

On 9/30/20 9:11 AM, H wrote:
> On 09/30/2020 12:03 PM, Simon Matter wrote:
>>> Since you have taken the disk apart it will now be useless as within the
>>> enclosure there could have been a vacuum or an inert gas.
>>  From what I know gas filled disks didn't exist in the times when 3X0GB was
>> on a 2" drive.
>>
>>> You will never be able to recover any data on the disk unless you go and
>>> pay
>>> for a professional data recovery organisation to read the platters.
>> No, if he did care that the disks didn't become dirty then the drive
>> should still work quite well to recover what is on it. Of course the cover
>> should be put on ASAP. If you don't believe me, just try it our yourself.
>>
>>> The price for a replacement 340GByte USB disk is about $25 which would
>>> give
>>> you a better product than your old disk.
>> The OP wanted to recover what is on the disk, not use it as a normal disk.
>>
>> Simon
>>
>>> Mark
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: H
>>> Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2020 4:47 PM
>>> To: centos at centos.org
>>> Subject: Re: [CentOS] External harddisk
>>>
>>> On 09/30/2020 05:40 AM, John Pierce wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Sep 29, 2020, 8:33 AM H <agents at meddatainc.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I have an old external harddisk, Toshiba 320 Gb, with a USB connector
>>>>> that
>>>>> I wanted to check for contents. It did not start up when connected and
>>>>> I
>>>>> could not hear the motor spinning. After leaving it in the freezer
>>>>> overnight the motor spins but it is not recognized by my computer. I
>>>>> disassembled it and could see that the head assembly rests outside the
>>>>> disk
>>>>> but when it is powered on, the head first moves to the center of the
>>>>> disk,
>>>>> then to the periphery and finally back to the resting position. This
>>>>> happens every few seconds and leaving it connected overnight changed
>>>>> nothing.
>>>>>
>>>> That repeated seeking suggests it's not passing its self test, and is
>>>> constantly retrying.   It's probably searching for servo data on the
>>>> disks,
>>>> and not finding it.
>>>>
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>>> I see. I have not searched for any low-level disk utility from Toshiba,
>>> the
>>> manufacturer of the disk. Do you think that might be worthwhile to
>>> hopefully
>>> fix this?
>>>
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> Simon, you are correct in all the above and I replaced the cover as soon as I had ascertained the movements of the head assembly.
>
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Opening up disk drives outside of a lab environment is NEVER a good idea if you expect the device to be useful.

I'm thinking this disk problem is tied to your more general usb problem.

There is a guy with a shop in NYC called Louis Rossmann who MAY be able to help with your data recovery.  Look him up on youtube or just google the name.