Salvage data from a PC's failed HD

aaron_us96

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Feb 7, 2007
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My girlfriend's Panasonic Toughbook's (laptop) internal hard drive up and failed out of nowhere today. She doesn't back up, so all her music, documents, etc.. is on that drive.

Is there a way to hook up her HD to my PowerBook (just as an external HD) in an attempt to salvage any data possible? We are more interested in getting the data than any other thing caz it also include some important company data in which works

Assuming I can get the HD out of her laptop, how would I go about hooking it up to my PowerBook as an external drive (I have a 200GB LaCie FW HD, so maybe I could just swap about the drives?) If it successfully mounted on my desktop, would I be able to just drag and drop files from her HD to my HD? I realize the disk needs to spin on both HD's for this to work, so I have my doubts, but I've gotta try something

or maybe there is an easier way?
 

mesarectifier

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Mar 26, 2006
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The laptop will be using a 2.5" hard drive, for which you can get cheap external enclosures (they're around £15 in this country, so probably around $20 or so). Of course there's no guarantee this will work, but surely it's worth a go.

My PowerBook seems to be pretty good at reading data that most PC's can't; more than once it's been able to read supposedly f*cked USB sticks and salvage most of the data, so I'd imagine that using the PB would be a good idea for data recovery.

OS X can read the widest range of filel systems save for perhaps some builds of Linux, so look into a Live Linux boot CD, too.
 

aBg_rOnGak

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Feb 23, 2006
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You can use several data recovery software. I recommend either Ontrack Data Recovery and Recover My Files. Been years since the last i used Ontrack's but Recover My File let you have an overview what files can be salvage and degree of recovery success



But uh-oh, you use Powerbook, guess my suggestion doesn't count, unless you can hook that hd to any Windows pc

Edit:You can try Hiren Boot CD (download the iso file), burn to a blank cd then boot from it
 

kevin_476

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Feb 8, 2007
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Well if you get her HD out, you would need an external HD enclosure to plug it in so you could connect it to your Mac to start with... And depending if it is formatted in FAT32 (you can read and write to it) or NTFS (read only) you get different results... But the start point is to get an enclosure to contain the HD... Don't neglect the possibility that there might be a Windows-specific way of dealing with this. I.e. ask on a Windows-related board, take the machine into a Windows shop, or just to your nearest Windows expert. Oh!!! I forgot to tell you. U can also try data recovery labs. One of the lab that I know is SAlvageData Recovery Lab Inc. I would suggest to give them a shot…If you wish you can call them at 1 203-973-0242. I hope you get your data back.