Hello again!
I told you that you'd miss me when I'm gone. :-]
Please, I need recommendations or strategies for recovering data. I had a
flash drive become unreadable, after I plugged it into my new printer to
print out some documents that had been long in waiting. Then, before I
could save myself, I had a 1.5 TB hard drive also fail. On this hard
drive is (of course) the source of those backup copies on the flash
drive. This is the partition which I was just about to backup.
I have several hard drives, from 200 GB up to 8 TB, from 20 years old to
brand-new; all are WD, except for one which is Seagate. Guess which one
failed? I forget when I got it, or why I ever would have got anything but
WD, or why I would have put anything important there.
I have used ddrescue to try to recover the data, as well as other
forensics tools. Recovered images (img and iso) are saved, and taking up
space, but I cannot determine if there is any useful content in what was
recovered. The failing partition has not been deleted. It cannot be read
or mounted, so I have just left it like that, so that I can try to save
it.
Every attempt to recover the data gives the same result: 2 errors, 3072
B, that cannot be read. I tried using tools to look inside the saved iso
image, but no luck there. I don't want to erase or format the failing
disk partition until I am sure that I have recovered the data.
My last hope is that I have another 1.5 TB hard drive; I could try to
write the disk images to that partition before I format the old drive.
But first, of course, I would need to backup materials from that drive,
and now I am running out of space again.
Bill
P.S. And if things were not bad enough, the skies here in San Francisco
are a muddy mixture of orange, black, brown and gray. At noon today, it
looked like the middle of the night.
_______________________________________________
tde-users mailing list -- users(a)trinitydesktop.org
To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave(a)trinitydesktop.org
Web mail archive available at
https://mail.trinitydesktop.org/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/users@trinitydes
kt
op.org
---------------------------------------------------------------------
There's another option but a wee bit expensive.
Purchase the same model SG drive (or whatever model etc) that failed and
swap out the electronics.
Assuming there's no mechanical damage, it will work.
It's often why I buy drives in pairs.
Hope this was helpful.
Kate