My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]


  1. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 64 Bit
       #1

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]


    Hi guys,

    Really hope you can help – I’m trying to recover photos of my granddad who recently passed away. The hard drive the photos were on has been “broken” for a few years now.

    At the time it stopped working I took it to a PC repair shop and they quoted me £500 “and it may or may not work” – I ended up leaving it.

    However now I really want to try to recover the photos I once had on there.

    First things first:

    Operating System

    Windows 7 Ultimate
    64 Bit Operating System

    What Happens When I Plug The Hardrive In

    I hear the noise that my computer makes when I connect a USB device.
    However, no new hard disk drives appear

    What Happens When I Go On Disk Management

    Under Disk Management I see the following:

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-1.png

    Disk 1
    Unknown
    Not Initialized

    This is the hard drive – I know this because if I unplug it, this drive disappears.

    Here are the options I see

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-2a.png

    When I try to initialize the disk (either option MBR or GBT I get an error saying “The Device Is Not Ready”)

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-2b.png

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-3.png

    After digging around I found this thread recommending MiniTool Partition Wizard Free Edition.

    When I follow the steps, here’s what I see:

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-4.png

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-5.png

    Quick Scan Results:

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-6.png

    Full Scan Results:

    My External HD Has Gone Kaput! [Help Please]-7.png

    At this point I’m out of ideas.

    Is this the end – should I just kiss goodbye to any hopes of getting my photos back?
    Or is there something else I can try?


    I’d really appreciate any assistance.

    Thanks in advance.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 3,487
    Win 7 Pro x64/Win 10 Pro x64 dual boot
       #2

    Whatever you do. Don't try to initialize the disk again. You could destroy the data that's on the hard disk.

    It may be that the drive has seized up and is unusable. You could try giving the drive a couple of sharp taps with your knuckles when you plug it in. It may jar the drive into spinning long enough to get some pictures off of it. Since the drive is broken, you really have nothing to lose.

    The alternative is a data recovery service, and they can be quite expensive.

    Unfortunately, this is a hard lesson on doing backups, and I'm sorry it happened to you, but every hard disk will fail eventually. Always back up those precious memories.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Thanks for your reply Mellon Head.

    So aside from a few taps when I plug it in, there's no other hope?

    Oh gosh...that's disappointing
    I guess I've learned my lesson the hard way
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Just tried the sharp tap approach. It doesn't seem to work
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 3,487
    Win 7 Pro x64/Win 10 Pro x64 dual boot
       #5

    That's a shame. I was hoping it might jog the drive into spinning for a while.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Unfortunately not. Anything else I could maybe try? Or is this the end of the line?
    Thanks
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 7,055
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit
       #7

    Partition Wizard did not list your external drive at all. Not a good sign. ( You ran PRW on your system drive. What for?)

    And you never mentioned details of your external drive. Manufacturer/model No, Model name ,capacity etc.,

    Please install the HDD manufacturer's diagnostic/repair Utility, run the Short and Long Tests and check the drive. Please note down the time taken for short and long tests. If the tests fail, you may have to take the HDD out of the enclosure, hook it up as a secondary internal drive on a Desktop and check it.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
       #8

    Hello La Nesra,

    If the files on the drive are valuable, you should bring it to professional data recovery center.
    The recovery will cost you much and they cannot guarantee, because they don't know how bad the situation is.
    The more you power up your drive and try to recover data yourself, the worse situation may become.

    Few examples:
    If drive head is stuck or damaged, it can be fixed and replaced without major loss.
    If drive controller gone bad, it can be replaced from same model drive and data will be safe.
    If drive head is scratching your drive platters, then data corrupts physically with each moment you power it up and recovery chances are decreasing.

    In my opinion R-Studio is one of best programs for data recovery, but it's not free and will cost you $80.

    I hope, you will be able to recover photos of your grandfather.
      My Computer


 

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