Saturday, January 12, 2008

How to recover data from your Hard Drive??

The first element in recovering data from a hard disk is the hardware configuration. With data recovery it is important that the disk being recovered is not written to. For this reason, CnW software does not try and access the logical drive C.

If a drive has failed, or has been corrupted, nothing must be loaded onto it, and it should be moved into a new computer and accessed as just a slave `data drive. CnW Software can then be loaded on a new host computer.

There are a few ways that a drive may be connected to another computer, and the following is probably not an exhaustive list

  • Place the IDE drive in a USB caddy. This is a very nice approach as it can be hot plugged, and does not involve removing the computer case. USB1.1 and USB 2.0 both work, though USB 1.1 is rather slow. This is also they way that CnW use when developing recovery programs.
  • Place the IDE drive in a Firewire caddy - this is similar to the USB described above
  • An IDE drive can be placed inside a computer using a spare connector. It may be necessary o change a jumper from Master to Slave.
  • For S-ATA, there may be spare S-ATA connectors in a computer - alternatively, it is possible to purchase a low cost PCI adapter card
  • For SCSI, there may be a SCSI connector in the PC, otherwise a SCSI adapter card will be required. SCSI cards can be expensive.
  • For laptops it is normally possible to purchase an adaptor that enables the drive to be read with the normal 3.5” IDE interface. These adaptors cost a few dollars. On some laptop drives, there is an extra connector with gold fingers - this will need to be removed (pulled off) to get to the standard connector with pins.

The next stage is to ensure that the computer sees the drive as a logical device, eg Drive K: Administrative Tools / Computer Management / Disk Management will show all detected devices, and if required a new drive letter can be selected. If the drive is not detected, then it is possible to scan for new drives, sometimes it is necessary to power off and restart the computer. CnW Software will detect Physical drives, as well as logical so mapping to a logical drive is not always necessary.

If it is not possible to detect a drive, then CnW software will not be able to help - it indicates a hard malfunction, rather than a logical corruption. Very often though, a drive will be seen in CnW Software, perhaps as Physical drive 3, but is not visible elsewhere on a PC.

Data recovery

On starting CnW software the wizard will be displayed, and at that point the required drive should be selected, and the Hard Drive icon clicked. The program will then start analysing the disk and will display an appropriate option screen for the media. For many drives the process will be fairly automatic, for very corrupted drives, choices may be offered to determine the best way forward. At no time is data every written to the failed drive, so if one solution does not work, other optuons can be tried..

For manual recovery, the normal approach is to use the Recover function, and the program will then go to the relevant routine for the type of media. For hard drives this will be NTFS, FAT or HPFS+ (Macintosh) recovery

Free demo download

No comments: