I think your over lookign the most impotant piec eof info here guys.....he just said he went to a friends house to lan....that means he had to "TRANSPORT" his case.....I'm not being sarcastic here but I think he might have overlooked the most obvios problem here....and that is that he might have bumped, shoved dropped,,.....whatever....the case in transit.
Call me a noob but last I remember, hard drives do NOT LIKE to be manhandled (bumped, dropped, shoved). Because if you do, well, this might be the problem.
You might not even realize it but picture this;
Your case is in the back seat.....your driving along....and you hit a bad pothole.... 🙁
And there in lies your problem. Just a thought but isn't that the sticker that they display BOLDLY on the antistatic bag when you buy a hdd?... "DO NOT DROP OR MISHANDLE THIS DEVICE"
Like I said before guys I'm not trying to be a smartass, but consider it.
Yeah, that's one thing I strongly considered, but hey . I had the Shuttle on the back floor of the car where there is no space for it to move, the house was pretty much a 1 minute drive. It could have been possibly due to moving the Shuttle, because I took it off my desk, put it downstairs, and hour later I take it, put it into the car, take it out, put it on the ground, put it in the house, then put it onto the carpet and boom it doesn't work.
I've moved this before, and I've moved other PC's before, but this just seems odd.
I first said this beeped because I listened to it, there were no beeps from the motherboard, but in the video, you can see as I put my phone closer to the HD, it is louder, there is a noise coming from the hard-drive, but I don't know whether it's a beep, or something scraping together.
The antistatic bag doesn't mean you can't move the HD, but it just means don't toss it around. Also, my system wasn't on while I was moving it, so there is no way that it got damaged while it was on, thats the weird part.
I didn't throw this system downstairs, but picked it off my table and took caution on how I was handling it, this rig cost me a lot of money, so I always baby it.
Also, data recovery is pretty pricey, even for like the 50GB of info I have on this hard-drive, I may not consider it, beacuse it's not like I was developing some long awaited file or something. It's just like my work's documents, invoices, family photos, not to mention like 20GB of music, but luckily it's on my iPod, but I don't know if that helps, and thank god I took some files onto my 1GB thumbdrive.
Also, does anyone know, if purchased music on iTunes can be somehow transfered?
My god man, stop trying to say everything is impossible. I had a couple scsi drives that were dropped by a client, I opened them up and sure as **** there were gouges on the platters, I transplanted them into another drive and got ALL their data off. The scratches weren't in a data bearing location.
I've done data recovery for years, and those are a few tricks that WORK.
I'd say buying another raptor to save data is a LOT cheaper than proffesional data recovery services, and even they can't always get data off so the risk is there either way (some services don't charge if data can't be recovered, but the warranty will void either way.)
There is a service called OnTrack, and they have authorization from hard-drive makers that they can restore data, but not void your warranty, but my friend's clients have recieved quotes from anywhere from $500-$1000
I don't really want to pay $1000 to recover some small, but not too important data.
I was just wondering, If in all cases I'm screwed, how would I transplant my platters from this drive, and into where?