WD My book not shoving up any data/partition


  1. Posts : 3
    win 10
       #1

    WD My book not shoving up any data/partition


    Hi!
    On my external drive “My Book”,

    2tb
    usb3
    Model Number: WDC20EARX-32PASB0 (ATA)
    bought in 2012

    Led started blinking in an anomalous manner, and it was connecting and disconnecting from pc continuosly.
    Supposing it may be a powersupply failure or a usb interface failure, I unmounted it and installed in a pc via sata connector.
    The hard disk is recognized by BIOS.
    It is not shoved among available drives in WIN 10, but it is seen in device manager and in disk management is showed as unallocated. It asked me to inizialize the disk, but It means a data loss.

    I want to recover all the files in the disk, but I can’t access it.

    I’m trying to analize it with Disk Test 7.1, but it shows me no partition.

    I red that WD disks are encrypted by default.

    I’ve been using the HDD as it came out of the box, without formatting in a different way from the one you factory did, without using WS SmartWare or other backup software.

    What can I do to to retrieve my data?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 1,784
    Linux Mint 18.2 xfce 64-bit (VMWare host) / Windows 8.1 Pro 32-bit (VMWare guest)
       #2

    Create a Linux CD for one of the Linux distros (most of them provide this). Set your computer to boot from the CD. Put that disk in the drive and then boot the computer to Linux. At this point, you will be running Linux from the CD, and nothing will have been installed to your internal hard drive.

    Once you are in Linux, you should be able to read the contents of your hard drive and copy them to an external drive.

    There are two advantages to this approach:

    1. You are booting from the CD, and your OS is on the CD. This means that there won't be any activity on your questionable drive, except when you are actually accessing the files on the drive. The reason this is good is because the more activity there is on that drive, the sooner it will fail, if it is a bad drive.

    2. Linux is very capable of reading drives that Windows can't read.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 3
    win 10
    Thread Starter
       #3

    mrjimphelps said:
    Create a Linux CD for one of the Linux distros (most of them provide this). Set your computer to boot from the CD. Put that disk in the drive and then boot the computer to Linux. At this point, you will be running Linux from the CD, and nothing will have been installed to your internal hard drive.

    Once you are in Linux, you should be able to read the contents of your hard drive and copy them to an external drive.

    There are two advantages to this approach:

    1. You are booting from the CD, and your OS is on the CD. This means that there won't be any activity on your questionable drive, except when you are actually accessing the files on the drive. The reason this is good is because the more activity there is on that drive, the sooner it will fail, if it is a bad drive.

    2. Linux is very capable of reading drives that Windows can't read.
    thank, already tried. problem is that Western Digital encrypts the content of their hard drive, soalso in linux (i've tried the latest live cd of ubuntu) the disk appears as uninitialized....damn...I will never buy a Western digital disk again!
      My Computer

  4.   My Computers


  5. Posts : 1,784
    Linux Mint 18.2 xfce 64-bit (VMWare host) / Windows 8.1 Pro 32-bit (VMWare guest)
       #5

    I had a coworker once with this same problem -- encrypted, and so he couldn't get his data. I believe it was a WD drive, but I'm not sure.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 1,784
    Linux Mint 18.2 xfce 64-bit (VMWare host) / Windows 8.1 Pro 32-bit (VMWare guest)
       #6

    Excellent tool! I'll pass this along to a former coworker who had the same encryption problem.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 3
    win 10
    Thread Starter
       #7

    thank you very much!
    So, as written, it doesn't decrypt the file directly, but it creates an image of disk that then has to be written to a disk. so being my disk a 2tb one I need another huge disk jsut for the image and another big one to write it...am I right?
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 16,149
    7 X64
       #8

    So, as written, it doesn't decrypt the file directly, but it creates an image of disk
    Yes.

    This might work as an alternative:

    Allegedly, you can use another enclosure/control board if product number is the same (except the three digit size code)

    How I rescued my data from a 3TB WD My Book External Hard Drive - YouTube


    How I rescued my data from a 3TB WD My Book External Hard Drive - YouTube
      My Computers


 

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