Hard Drive Dead. Please Help

pillainp

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Hi,
I have a HDD (Seagate ST2000DM001 2TB) that has suddenly died on me.

The drive is not recognised either in the BIOS or in Windows 7. Additionally, the system refuses to boot when this particular drive is connected. I have tried changing data and power cables but that does not cause the drive to be recognised.

Strangely, Seagate's bootable firmware updater sees the drive and has updated the firmware from CC26 to CC29. The firmware updater reports the drive health status as being GOOD and the SMART status as HEALTHY.

This drive contains all of my financial and personal data, which I cannot afford to lose, and valuable irreplaceable pictures of the kids.

Is there anything I can try before I am forced to hand over the drive to a professional data recovery company?
 

My Computers

System One System Two

  • Computer type
    Laptop
    Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
    Custom
    OS
    Windows 10 Professional 64-Bit
    CPU
    Intel Core i7 8700K
    Motherboard
    Asus Maximus X Code
    Memory
    G.Skill TridentZ RGB DDR4 4000 F4-4000C18D-16GTZR
    Graphics Card(s)
    Zotac GeForce GTX-1660 Ti AMP 6GB
    Sound Card
    ROG SupremeFX S1220 (Onboard)
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell UP2716D
    Screen Resolution
    2560x1440
    Hard Drives
    Samsung 980 Pro PCIe NVMe 500GB
    Samsung 970 Evo PCIe NVMe 250GB
    Samsung 860 Evo SATA III 2TB
    WD Black WD2003FZEX 2TB x 3
    ODD - GH24NSC0
    PSU
    Coolermaster V1000
    Case
    Corsair Obsidian 450D
    Cooling
    Corsair H115i - Corsair SP140 Red x 2
    Keyboard
    Logitech G213
    Mouse
    Logitech G102
    Internet Speed
    100 Mbps (Supposedly) - Asianet India FTTH
    Antivirus
    Avast Free!
    Browser
    Maxthon Cloud Browser 5.xx
    Other Info
    Asus FX-553VD (960 Evo, 860 Evo, 16GB)
    Samsung Galaxy C9 Pro
    Canon EOS 70D
  • Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model Number
    Asus FX503VD
    OS
    Windows 10 Pro x64
    CPU
    Intel Core i7 7700HQ
    Memory
    2 x 8GB Samsung DDR4 2400
    Graphics Card(s)
    GTX 1050
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080
    Hard Drives
    Samsung 960 Evo PCIe NVMe 250GB Boot
    Samsung 840 Pro Series 256 GB SSD (MZ-7PD256BW);
Please post information about your drives so that a member can determine if there is a misconfiguration. Having this information also makes it easier to a discuss course of action.
See: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/274797-disk-management-post-screen-capture-image.html

You could also try Minitool Partition Wizard (PW)
For a quick test, download the Home Edition, then post a screenshot of the initial PW screen.
See: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/9733-screenshots-files-upload-post-seven-forums.html

The initial screen provides all the information needed at this point. If further action can be taken, it might be better to use the Bootable CD, download the ISO from the link above (at the bottom of the downloads page)and burn it to a disc (CD is fine - it's small enough)

Is this an internal or external drive?
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavilion dv6-6c10us
OS
x64 (6.3.9600) Win8.1 Pro & soon dual boot x64 (6.1.7601) Win7_SP1 HomePrem
CPU
AMD A6-3420M APU with Radeon(tm) HD Graphics
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1805
Memory
6.00 GB
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon(TM) HD 6520G
Sound Card
(1) AMD High Definition Audio Device (2) IDT High Definiti
Monitor(s) Displays
HP W2072a 20" LCD (1600 x 900) @ 60 Hz
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
ST640LM0 00 HM641JI SATA Disk Device
Keyboard
Logitech k520 wireless KB
Mouse
Logitech m320 wireless mouse (bundled with KB)
Internet Speed
15/5 | 54 MB Wireless 'n'
Antivirus
Realtime: Defender or Avast | On-demand: Malwarebytes, ESET
Browser
IE 11 on Win8, IE 10 on win 7
Other Info
Media: [Gimp, Audacity, VLC] || Comm: [WEmail 2012, Skype] || Productivity: [OpenOffice,| Textpad] || Utils: [Sysinternals, cCleaner, Speccy, Defraggler]
All software data recovery methods begin with the drives recognition in BIOS. But that is only the beginning.

You need to decide early on whether your data is worth the cost of professional data recovery which will be expensive. There is the risk that repeated do it yourself recovery methods may further damage the drive to the point where professional recovery is more difficult or not possible at all. Only you can decide if the risk is warranted.

The possibility of drive failure is just one reason why many people make backups before problems develop. All files of any importance need at least one backup copy. Files of particular importance (as appears to be the case here) should have a minimum of 2 backup copies. Having no backups is like walking a high wire without a net. Sooner or later you will fall (the drive fails).
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP
OS
Windows 7 Pro 64 bit
CPU
Xeon W3520
Memory
8 GB
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce 210
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