hi
my external USB HDD has died after 3 years of loyal service. Only thing is, I was using it as my backup so I've kinda lost everything from the past 8 years. (all my DVD's were lost in the move to Japan)
I was wondering if anyone has ever had this error:
<font color="red"> Unable to read FAT (Input/output error) </font>
and if so, were you able to fix it?
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and fuck apple for releasing the 24 inch mac three weeks after I got my 20 inch mac.
Sorry aboot yer drive, hawken. can't you just go trade up on your mac? =]
im sure they do real fresh sheeps brain in Japan
Scoobs, then me.. and now you - we're all getting hard disk failures! Which reminds me, I have to send off my proof of purchase to get an RMA and return that faulty bitch.
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Me also back in Mayish.
I suffered the same fate a few years ago, Hawken. Lost 5+ years of work
Sorry to hear of your misfortune.
Scooby is right on target with the data recovery prices, though. Considering that most of it can be done with cheap software, I have NO IDEA why these places charge so much. Getting data off a jacked HDD here in Reno is a minimum of $1000. Rip off.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.09/play.html?pg=13
I've just replaced an IBM Deathstar drive that was closing in on a drive failure. It often made a BIP-click-clack-BIP noise, usually it did that once a day at most, recently it's been doing that constantly and sometimes causing BSODs. Does anyone know what that noise is?
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It's the hard drive head falling down onto the spinning platter and skipping off to the edge. Deathstars where notorious for that problem and the noise became known as the "click of death"
Sounds like the tables are fucked up, partition data is probably the cause, bad sectors would do that. Grab a boot disc or cd with chkdsk on it, since it's FAT formatted you wont need ntfs dos support, run 'CHKDSK /R' and wait. That will flag bad sectors and move data to good ones. Try to get the data off after that. Use an xcopy to grab the files, use the switches to not halt the operation on errors and it will pull everything it can, and ignore the rest.
IF the drive is mechanically failing, 95% of the time your MAC would prompt you in post with a s.m.a.r.t. error number. Most severe mechanical problems with HD's are also audible. PM me if you need anything else I guess.