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| Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the files inside the old hard drive. I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into the computer!!!!! Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer had access to it. I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and unplug it. Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried everything I possibly know how to try. Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get data off this laptop hard drive? Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little directions. Help please ! :) |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data Re: "I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into the computer!!!!" You got that part right. In this type of situation, always, always, always treat the source drive as "read only". You may have lost the date irrecoverably, but maybe not. In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try that. The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant hardware or data structure problems. [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that port, usually optical drives).] rantr13******.com wrote: > I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. > > I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those > external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and > within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the > files inside the old hard drive. > > I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare > to burn them on DVD discs. > Stupid mistake! > I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > the computer!!!!! > > Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that > particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer > had access to it. > > I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even > went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the > computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. > > Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a > drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard > drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and > unplug it. > > Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. > > I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > > I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > everything I possibly know how to try. > > Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get > data off this laptop hard drive? > > Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have > because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little > directions. > > Help please ! > > :) > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data < In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try that. > < The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > < USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant hardware or data structure problems. > < [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that port, usually optical drives).] > In the original message I mentioned: > > I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > > > > I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > > everything I possibly know how to try. The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin either. So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. So I connected the adapter to the laptop and to the PC's IDE cable 9after breaking off the middle uneeded pin) and connected the power cable of the adapter-----and it still did absolutely nothing. I had at least something trying to go on with the USB version (the extrenal box adapter)....but nothing with the IDE cables. I don't know if I need to set some jumpers to accept the hard drive as "slave" or what. If so, I have no clue how to do that. Any advice how to use the IDE cable adapters to where they work? Because they come with absolutely no directions at all whatsoever. Barry Watzman wrote: > Re: "I started switching files around from one folder to another to > prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have > immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > the computer!!!!" > > You got that part right. In this type of situation, always, always, > always treat the source drive as "read only". > > You may have lost the date irrecoverably, but maybe not. > > In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE > interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > that. > > The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB > controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > > USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > hardware or data structure problems. > > [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that > port, usually optical drives).] > > > rantr13******.com wrote: > > > I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. > > > > I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those > > external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and > > within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the > > files inside the old hard drive. > > > > I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare > > to burn them on DVD discs. > > Stupid mistake! > > I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > > the computer!!!!! > > > > Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that > > particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer > > had access to it. > > > > I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even > > went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the > > computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. > > > > Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a > > drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard > > drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and > > unplug it. > > > > Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. > > > > I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > > > > I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > > everything I possibly know how to try. > > > > Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get > > data off this laptop hard drive? > > > > Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have > > because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little > > directions. > > > > Help please ! > > > > :) > > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data rantr13******.com wrote: > The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop > female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's > block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being > put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have > to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's > use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin > either. > > So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's > IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the > pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. > I have an adapter here that is a circuit board with a female laptop IDE adapter on one side, and a male PC IDE adapter on the other side. The PC side has one pin missing. Yes you have to make sure that the laptop drive is not plugged in upside down so pin 1 on the laptop drive has to go on the end closest to the power adapter. Not sure what you are talking about, but did you have the drive reversed? Ian Singer -- ================================================== ======================= See my homepage at http://www.iansinger.com hosted on http://www.1and1.com/?k_id=10623894 All genealogy is stored in TMG from http://www.whollygenes.com Charts and searching using TNG from http://www.tngsitebuilding.com I am near Toronto Canada, can I tell where you are from your reply? ================================================== ======================= |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data > Yes you have to make sure that the laptop drive is not plugged in upside down so pin 1 on the laptop drive has to go on the end closest to the power adapter. Not sure what you are talking about, but did you have the drive reversed? > Nope, it was connected properly. So I guess the "Master" - "Slave" thing isn't an issue. Because this was once a Master drive in a laptop. It seems like setting it up in a PC's IDE cable is making the drive a Slave drive rather than another Master. Sorry, I just have no clue what to do or what's going on, problemwise. Ian Singer wrote: > rantr13******.com wrote: > > > The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop > > female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's > > block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being > > put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have > > to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's > > use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin > > either. > > > > So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's > > IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the > > pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. > > > > I have an adapter here that is a circuit board with a female laptop IDE > adapter on one side, and a male PC IDE adapter on the other side. The PC > side has one pin missing. Yes you have to make sure that the laptop > drive is not plugged in upside down so pin 1 on the laptop drive has to > go on the end closest to the power adapter. Not sure what you are > talking about, but did you have the drive reversed? > > Ian Singer > > -- > > > ================================================== ======================= > See my homepage at http://www.iansinger.com > hosted on http://www.1and1.com/?k_id=10623894 > All genealogy is stored in TMG from http://www.whollygenes.com > Charts and searching using TNG from http://www.tngsitebuilding.com > I am near Toronto Canada, can I tell where you are from your reply? > ================================================== ======================= |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data rantr13******.com wrote: > > So I guess the "Master" - "Slave" thing isn't an issue. > Because this was once a Master drive in a laptop. > It seems like setting it up in a PC's IDE cable is making the drive a > Slave drive rather than another Master. > If the HD in the PC is set on the Primary IDE channel and the laptop hard drive is on the Secondary IDE channel then that means they are both on separate cables and so master/slave is immaterial. If they are both on the same cable then one has to be set as Master and the other as SLAVE unless they are both set to autoselect. Ian Singer -- ================================================== ======================= See my homepage at http://www.iansinger.com hosted on http://www.1and1.com/?k_id=10623894 All genealogy is stored in TMG from http://www.whollygenes.com Charts and searching using TNG from http://www.tngsitebuilding.com I am near Toronto Canada, can I tell where you are from your reply? ================================================== ======================= |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data What about trying this item here? http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=160025500940 Would it help me in any way different than the other methods I've tried? There's got to be something out there to solve this problem with? I've even considered buying another one of the exact same laptop on ebay and installing this hard drive in it instead. Or buy an external hard drive, connect it to the PC then switch that hard rive with the old laptop hard drive. Or do those work on 40 (actually 39) pin adapters? Seems like my only other alternative is to take a computer course on how to work on computers. And see if I can learn how myself. Or pay a tech to teach me how. |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data Normally the laptop drive will be configured as a master, but sometimes as "cable select". Put it on an IDE channel BY ITSELF (NO other drive present), then it can be seen (since the desktop's hard drive is, by definition, on the primary IDE channel, put the laptop drive on the secondary channel. If there were other drives on the secondary channel, temporarily disconnect them). Yes, there is a pin that is used for "keying" the connector. The adapter may or may not have that pin present. on the desktop side, and it may not have the key on the laptop side. You have to carefully insure that you get pin 1 to pin 1 all the way from the motherboard IDE port to the laptop drive (and all of the cables and adapters in between). You can put it on backwards. Usually won't do any damage, but it won't work. You also have to connect power to the 2.5" to 3.5" adapter. If the drive doesn't spin up, then you definitely have something wrong. There is a chance that you broke off the wrong pin, if your reference to "pin 1" was wrong somewhere. [Breaking off a pin is sometimes necessary if you have a desktop IDE cable which is keyed. It's usually easier to get an unkeyed cable than to break off the pin, and it's not difficult to break off the wrong pin if you have the cable backwards (in fact, there's almost a 50% chance of that). rantr13******.com wrote: > < In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an > IDE > interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > > that. > > > < The information that you get from device manager relates only to the > USB > controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > > > < USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > > any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > hardware or data structure problems. > > > < [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to > that > port, usually optical drives).] > > > > In the original message I mentioned: > > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. >>> >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > > > > The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop > female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's > block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being > put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have > to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's > use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin > either. > > So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's > IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the > pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. > > So I connected the adapter to the laptop and to the PC's IDE cable > 9after breaking off the middle uneeded pin) and connected the power > cable of the adapter-----and it still did absolutely nothing. > > I had at least something trying to go on with the USB version (the > extrenal box adapter)....but nothing with the IDE cables. I don't know > if I need to set some jumpers to accept the hard drive as "slave" or > what. > > If so, I have no clue how to do that. > > Any advice how to use the IDE cable adapters to where they work? > Because they come with absolutely no directions at all whatsoever. > > > > > > > Barry Watzman wrote: > >>Re: "I started switching files around from one folder to another to >>prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have >>immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into >>the computer!!!!" >> >>You got that part right. In this type of situation, always, always, >>always treat the source drive as "read only". >> >>You may have lost the date irrecoverably, but maybe not. >> >>In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE >>interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try >>that. >> >>The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB >>controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. >> >>USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have >>any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, >>when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant >>hardware or data structure problems. >> >>[The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop >>drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop >>computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that >>port, usually optical drives).] >> >> >>rantr13******.com wrote: >> >> >>>I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. >>> >>>I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those >>>external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and >>>within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the >>>files inside the old hard drive. >>> >>>I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare >>>to burn them on DVD discs. >>>Stupid mistake! >>>I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into >>>the computer!!!!! >>> >>>Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that >>>particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer >>>had access to it. >>> >>>I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even >>>went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the >>>computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. >>> >>>Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a >>>drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard >>>drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and >>>unplug it. >>> >>>Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. >>> >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. >>> >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried >>>everything I possibly know how to try. >>> >>>Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get >>>data off this laptop hard drive? >>> >>>Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have >>>because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little >>>directions. >>> >>>Help please ! >>> >>>:) >>> > > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data The laptop might have used "cable select" instead of "master", and if so, depending on the cable that you use, the drive could come up as a slave rather than as a master when you plug it into the desktop. rantr13******.com wrote: >> Yes you have to make sure that the laptop > > drive is not plugged in upside down so pin 1 on the laptop drive has to > > go on the end closest to the power adapter. Not sure what you are > talking about, but did you have the drive reversed? > > > Nope, it was connected properly. > > So I guess the "Master" - "Slave" thing isn't an issue. > Because this was once a Master drive in a laptop. > It seems like setting it up in a PC's IDE cable is making the drive a > Slave drive rather than another Master. > > Sorry, I just have no clue what to do or what's going on, problemwise. > > > > > Ian Singer wrote: > >>rantr13******.com wrote: >> >> >>>The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop >>>female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's >>>block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being >>>put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have >>>to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's >>>use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin >>>either. >>> >>>So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's >>>IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the >>>pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. >>> >> >>I have an adapter here that is a circuit board with a female laptop IDE >>adapter on one side, and a male PC IDE adapter on the other side. The PC >>side has one pin missing. Yes you have to make sure that the laptop >>drive is not plugged in upside down so pin 1 on the laptop drive has to >>go on the end closest to the power adapter. Not sure what you are >>talking about, but did you have the drive reversed? >> >>Ian Singer >> >>-- >> >> >>================================================ ========================= >> See my homepage at http://www.iansinger.com >> hosted on http://www.1and1.com/?k_id=10623894 >> All genealogy is stored in TMG from http://www.whollygenes.com >> Charts and searching using TNG from http://www.tngsitebuilding.com >> I am near Toronto Canada, can I tell where you are from your reply? >>================================================ ========================= > > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data That's my favorite device, but no, it won't help you. It's architecturally no different than the USB case. Just physically different and more versatile (in ways that are irrelevant to your current situation). rantr13******.com wrote: > What about trying this item here? > > http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=160025500940 > > Would it help me in any way different than the other methods I've > tried? > > There's got to be something out there to solve this problem with? > > I've even considered buying another one of the exact same laptop on > ebay and installing this hard drive in it instead. > > Or buy an external hard drive, connect it to the PC then switch that > hard rive with the old laptop hard drive. > > Or do those work on 40 (actually 39) pin adapters? > > Seems like my only other alternative is to take a computer course on > how to work on computers. > And see if I can learn how myself. > > Or pay a tech to teach me how. > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data Unfortunately, you don't have time to learn now. And neither could a tech really teach you in a reasonable amount of time (or at a reasonable cost, if he's being paid). Also, there is the possibility that the drive is just dead, and that no one could get it to work ... e.g. you might not be doing anything wrong. rantr13******.com wrote: > What about trying this item here? > > http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=160025500940 > > Would it help me in any way different than the other methods I've > tried? > > There's got to be something out there to solve this problem with? > > I've even considered buying another one of the exact same laptop on > ebay and installing this hard drive in it instead. > > Or buy an external hard drive, connect it to the PC then switch that > hard rive with the old laptop hard drive. > > Or do those work on 40 (actually 39) pin adapters? > > Seems like my only other alternative is to take a computer course on > how to work on computers. > And see if I can learn how myself. > > Or pay a tech to teach me how. > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data rantr13******.com wrote: > What about trying this item here? > > http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=160025500940 Effectively same as the external drive box you already tried. Waste of money for what you need. > > There's got to be something out there to solve this problem with? So when you have it plugged in on the IDE cable on Secondary channel its not recognized at all. Do you know if drive is still good? Ship it off to a volunteer in this newsgroup and if its still good they will pull of your data. > I've even considered buying another one of the exact same laptop on > ebay and installing this hard drive in it instead. What for. If PC cant see it then laptop won't. > > Or buy an external hard drive, connect it to the PC then switch that > hard rive with the old laptop hard drive. Doesn't make sense. > > Or do those work on 40 (actually 39) pin adapters? > > Or pay a tech to teach me how. > Mail it to me and if the drive is stil functional I will pull off all your data and mail back to you on CDs. Will even take drive as payment. Ian Singer -- ================================================== ======================= See my homepage at http://www.iansinger.com hosted on http://www.1and1.com/?k_id=10623894 All genealogy is stored in TMG from http://www.whollygenes.com Charts and searching using TNG from http://www.tngsitebuilding.com I am near Toronto Canada, can I tell where you are from your reply? ================================================== ======================= |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data I'll try what you suggest by unplugging all other devices on the secondary cable. But, no, with the pin present, the female PC IDE cable automatically keeps the male adapter from being plugged in with a piece of plastic blocking it. Look in the middle of an IDE cable female plug. Nearly all IDE females have the piece of plastic blocking in the middle where the missing pin should be. So if the male adapter plugs in to the female IDE cable then you broke off the correct pin. I'm going try unplugging all secondary cables. However, I expect to get some "Can't find...." error messages while doing so. We'll see. Barry Watzman wrote: > Normally the laptop drive will be configured as a master, but sometimes > as "cable select". Put it on an IDE channel BY ITSELF (NO other drive > present), then it can be seen (since the desktop's hard drive is, by > definition, on the primary IDE channel, put the laptop drive on the > secondary channel. If there were other drives on the secondary channel, > temporarily disconnect them). > > Yes, there is a pin that is used for "keying" the connector. The > adapter may or may not have that pin present. on the desktop side, and > it may not have the key on the laptop side. You have to carefully > insure that you get pin 1 to pin 1 all the way from the motherboard IDE > port to the laptop drive (and all of the cables and adapters in > between). You can put it on backwards. Usually won't do any damage, > but it won't work. You also have to connect power to the 2.5" to 3.5" > adapter. If the drive doesn't spin up, then you definitely have > something wrong. > > There is a chance that you broke off the wrong pin, if your reference to > "pin 1" was wrong somewhere. [Breaking off a pin is sometimes necessary > if you have a desktop IDE cable which is keyed. It's usually easier to > get an unkeyed cable than to break off the pin, and it's not difficult > to break off the wrong pin if you have the cable backwards (in fact, > there's almost a 50% chance of that). > > > rantr13******.com wrote: > > > < In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an > > IDE > > interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > > > > that. > > > > > < The information that you get from device manager relates only to the > > USB > > controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > > > > > < USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > > > > any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > > when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > > hardware or data structure problems. > > > > > < [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > > drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > > computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to > > that > > port, usually optical drives).] > > > > > > > In the original message I mentioned: > > > > > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > >>> > >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > > > > > > > > The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop > > female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's > > block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being > > put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have > > to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's > > use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin > > either. > > > > So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's > > IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the > > pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. > > > > So I connected the adapter to the laptop and to the PC's IDE cable > > 9after breaking off the middle uneeded pin) and connected the power > > cable of the adapter-----and it still did absolutely nothing. > > > > I had at least something trying to go on with the USB version (the > > extrenal box adapter)....but nothing with the IDE cables. I don't know > > if I need to set some jumpers to accept the hard drive as "slave" or > > what. > > > > If so, I have no clue how to do that. > > > > Any advice how to use the IDE cable adapters to where they work? > > Because they come with absolutely no directions at all whatsoever. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Barry Watzman wrote: > > > >>Re: "I started switching files around from one folder to another to > >>prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have > >>immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > >>the computer!!!!" > >> > >>You got that part right. In this type of situation, always, always, > >>always treat the source drive as "read only". > >> > >>You may have lost the date irrecoverably, but maybe not. > >> > >>In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE > >>interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > >>that. > >> > >>The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB > >>controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > >> > >>USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > >>any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > >>when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > >>hardware or data structure problems. > >> > >>[The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > >>drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > >>computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that > >>port, usually optical drives).] > >> > >> > >>rantr13******.com wrote: > >> > >> > >>>I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. > >>> > >>>I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those > >>>external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and > >>>within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the > >>>files inside the old hard drive. > >>> > >>>I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare > >>>to burn them on DVD discs. > >>>Stupid mistake! > >>>I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > >>>the computer!!!!! > >>> > >>>Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that > >>>particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer > >>>had access to it. > >>> > >>>I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even > >>>went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the > >>>computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. > >>> > >>>Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a > >>>drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard > >>>drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and > >>>unplug it. > >>> > >>>Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. > >>> > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > >>> > >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > >>> > >>>Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get > >>>data off this laptop hard drive? > >>> > >>>Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have > >>>because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little > >>>directions. > >>> > >>>Help please ! > >>> > >>>:) > >>> > > > > |
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| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data I'll try what you suggest by unplugging all other devices on the secondary cable. But, no, with the pin present, the female PC IDE cable automatically keeps the male adapter from being plugged in with a piece of plastic blocking it. Look in the middle of an IDE cable female plug. Nearly all IDE females have the piece of plastic blocking in the middle where the missing pin should be. So if the male adapter plugs in to the female IDE cable then you broke off the correct pin. I'm going try unplugging all secondary cables. However, I expect to get some "Can't find...." error messages while doing so. We'll see. Barry Watzman wrote: > Normally the laptop drive will be configured as a master, but sometimes > as "cable select". Put it on an IDE channel BY ITSELF (NO other drive > present), then it can be seen (since the desktop's hard drive is, by > definition, on the primary IDE channel, put the laptop drive on the > secondary channel. If there were other drives on the secondary channel, > temporarily disconnect them). > > Yes, there is a pin that is used for "keying" the connector. The > adapter may or may not have that pin present. on the desktop side, and > it may not have the key on the laptop side. You have to carefully > insure that you get pin 1 to pin 1 all the way from the motherboard IDE > port to the laptop drive (and all of the cables and adapters in > between). You can put it on backwards. Usually won't do any damage, > but it won't work. You also have to connect power to the 2.5" to 3.5" > adapter. If the drive doesn't spin up, then you definitely have > something wrong. > > There is a chance that you broke off the wrong pin, if your reference to > "pin 1" was wrong somewhere. [Breaking off a pin is sometimes necessary > if you have a desktop IDE cable which is keyed. It's usually easier to > get an unkeyed cable than to break off the pin, and it's not difficult > to break off the wrong pin if you have the cable backwards (in fact, > there's almost a 50% chance of that). > > > rantr13******.com wrote: > > > < In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an > > IDE > > interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > > > > that. > > > > > < The information that you get from device manager relates only to the > > USB > > controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > > > > > < USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > > > > any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > > when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > > hardware or data structure problems. > > > > > < [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > > drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > > computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to > > that > > port, usually optical drives).] > > > > > > > In the original message I mentioned: > > > > > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > >>> > >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > > > > > > > > The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop > > female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's > > block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being > > put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have > > to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's > > use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin > > either. > > > > So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's > > IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the > > pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. > > > > So I connected the adapter to the laptop and to the PC's IDE cable > > 9after breaking off the middle uneeded pin) and connected the power > > cable of the adapter-----and it still did absolutely nothing. > > > > I had at least something trying to go on with the USB version (the > > extrenal box adapter)....but nothing with the IDE cables. I don't know > > if I need to set some jumpers to accept the hard drive as "slave" or > > what. > > > > If so, I have no clue how to do that. > > > > Any advice how to use the IDE cable adapters to where they work? > > Because they come with absolutely no directions at all whatsoever. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Barry Watzman wrote: > > > >>Re: "I started switching files around from one folder to another to > >>prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have > >>immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > >>the computer!!!!" > >> > >>You got that part right. In this type of situation, always, always, > >>always treat the source drive as "read only". > >> > >>You may have lost the date irrecoverably, but maybe not. > >> > >>In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE > >>interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > >>that. > >> > >>The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB > >>controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > >> > >>USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > >>any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > >>when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > >>hardware or data structure problems. > >> > >>[The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > >>drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > >>computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that > >>port, usually optical drives).] > >> > >> > >>rantr13******.com wrote: > >> > >> > >>>I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. > >>> > >>>I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those > >>>external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and > >>>within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the > >>>files inside the old hard drive. > >>> > >>>I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare > >>>to burn them on DVD discs. > >>>Stupid mistake! > >>>I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > >>>the computer!!!!! > >>> > >>>Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that > >>>particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer > >>>had access to it. > >>> > >>>I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even > >>>went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the > >>>computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. > >>> > >>>Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a > >>>drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard > >>>drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and > >>>unplug it. > >>> > >>>Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. > >>> > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > >>> > >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > >>> > >>>Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get > >>>data off this laptop hard drive? > >>> > >>>Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have > >>>because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little > >>>directions. > >>> > >>>Help please ! > >>> > >>>:) > >>> > > > > |
| |||
| Re: Having hard time retrieving Laptop hard drive data Tried it all night long. Again ! Another all nighter. I even put the laptop drive in the Master Drive cable just to see what would happen but it said it was missing a system file and to put in Windows Recovery disc in and press R. I did that and never succeeded in recovering the problem. ' I just don't understand why it onjce worked when I first put it in this particular computer. And now it won't work at all. It creates a drive for the hard drive whether in the USB adapter or on the IDE cable but that's as far as it it gets. It never reads the drive. Yet Device Manager says it's working perfectly. I don't know if the Bios is rejecting it for some reason or what. Why would it work in the beginning and after 30 minutes, reject it and never let it read again. There has just got to be some way to retrieve the files off this computer. Truthfully I am only after about 5 or 6 crucial files that are irreplaceable. the rest I don't care about. And I am to the point of paying almost anything to get the files. But because of the contents on the drive involving personal files, I have to be the one to do it. Not a tech. See the bind I am in? rantr13******.com wrote: > I'll try what you suggest by unplugging all other devices on the > secondary cable. > > But, no, with the pin present, the female PC IDE cable automatically > keeps the male adapter from being plugged in with a piece of plastic > blocking it. Look in the middle of an IDE cable female plug. Nearly > all IDE females have the piece of plastic blocking in the middle where > the missing pin should be. > > So if the male adapter plugs in to the female IDE cable then you broke > off the correct pin. > > I'm going try unplugging all secondary cables. > > However, I expect to get some "Can't find...." error messages while > doing so. > > We'll see. > > > > > Barry Watzman wrote: > > Normally the laptop drive will be configured as a master, but sometimes > > as "cable select". Put it on an IDE channel BY ITSELF (NO other drive > > present), then it can be seen (since the desktop's hard drive is, by > > definition, on the primary IDE channel, put the laptop drive on the > > secondary channel. If there were other drives on the secondary channel, > > temporarily disconnect them). > > > > Yes, there is a pin that is used for "keying" the connector. The > > adapter may or may not have that pin present. on the desktop side, and > > it may not have the key on the laptop side. You have to carefully > > insure that you get pin 1 to pin 1 all the way from the motherboard IDE > > port to the laptop drive (and all of the cables and adapters in > > between). You can put it on backwards. Usually won't do any damage, > > but it won't work. You also have to connect power to the 2.5" to 3.5" > > adapter. If the drive doesn't spin up, then you definitely have > > something wrong. > > > > There is a chance that you broke off the wrong pin, if your reference to > > "pin 1" was wrong somewhere. [Breaking off a pin is sometimes necessary > > if you have a desktop IDE cable which is keyed. It's usually easier to > > get an unkeyed cable than to break off the pin, and it's not difficult > > to break off the wrong pin if you have the cable backwards (in fact, > > there's almost a 50% chance of that). > > > > > > rantr13******.com wrote: > > > > > < In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an > > > IDE > > > interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > > > > > > that. > > > > > > > < The information that you get from device manager relates only to the > > > USB > > > controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > > > > > > > < USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > > > > > > any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > > > when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > > > hardware or data structure problems. > > > > > > > < [The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > > > drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > > > computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to > > > that > > > port, usually optical drives).] > > > > > > > > > > In the original message I mentioned: > > > > > > > > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > > >>> > > >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > > >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > > > > > > > > > > > > The weird thing is those adapter plugs come with 40 pins when laptop > > > female IDE cables have one of the pins in the middle blocked. PC's > > > block one of the pins in the middle probably to insure that it is being > > > put on correctly since it doesn't use that pin. So basically, you have > > > to break the middle pin off of the adapter. Neither PC's or laptop's > > > use them. I looked at the laptop drive and it has no middle pin > > > either. > > > > > > So if you have a 40 pin adapter, it isn't able to be fit into your PC's > > > IDE cable until the middle pin s broken off. Since the laptop has the > > > pin missing anyway, it evidently is not needed. > > > > > > So I connected the adapter to the laptop and to the PC's IDE cable > > > 9after breaking off the middle uneeded pin) and connected the power > > > cable of the adapter-----and it still did absolutely nothing. > > > > > > I had at least something trying to go on with the USB version (the > > > extrenal box adapter)....but nothing with the IDE cables. I don't know > > > if I need to set some jumpers to accept the hard drive as "slave" or > > > what. > > > > > > If so, I have no clue how to do that. > > > > > > Any advice how to use the IDE cable adapters to where they work? > > > Because they come with absolutely no directions at all whatsoever. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Barry Watzman wrote: > > > > > >>Re: "I started switching files around from one folder to another to > > >>prepare to burn them on DVD discs. Stupid mistake! I should have > > >>immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > > >>the computer!!!!" > > >> > > >>You got that part right. In this type of situation, always, always, > > >>always treat the source drive as "read only". > > >> > > >>You may have lost the date irrecoverably, but maybe not. > > >> > > >>In this type of situation, you will have more luck (if any) using an IDE > > >>interface instead of USB. Get a 2.5" to 3.5" ide cable adapter and try > > >>that. > > >> > > >>The information that you get from device manager relates only to the USB > > >>controller in the external box, not to the drive itself. > > >> > > >>USB external adapters are fine for drives that work ok and don't have > > >>any fundamental underlying problems. They do not work well, however, > > >>when dealing with a drive that is failing or which has significant > > >>hardware or data structure problems. > > >> > > >>[The best way to use an IDE adapter is to temporarily put the laptop > > >>drive, via the adpater, onto the secondary IDE port of a desktop > > >>computer (temporarily disconnect all devices currently connected to that > > >>port, usually optical drives).] > > >> > > >> > > >>rantr13******.com wrote: > > >> > > >> > > >>>I am trying to recover data from my laptop's hard drive. > > >>> > > >>>I took the hard drive out of the laptop and put it in one of those > > >>>external hard drive boxes that connect to the USB port of a PC and > > >>>within a few minutes the drive showed up including access to all the > > >>>files inside the old hard drive. > > >>> > > >>>I started switching files around from one folder to another to prepare > > >>>to burn them on DVD discs. > > >>>Stupid mistake! > > >>>I should have immediately copied the files from the old hard drive into > > >>>the computer!!!!! > > >>> > > >>>Within about 30 minutes of switching files around, suddenly that > > >>>particular hard drive disapeared from the computer saying I no longer > > >>>had access to it. > > >>> > > >>>I've tried it on other computers using the same external box and even > > >>>went to the point of buying another brand's external box---which the > > >>>computer never even recognzied, meaning I had less success with it. > > >>> > > >>>Now, still trying to access the data, all the computer does is set up a > > >>>drive for it but it tries yet never actually reads it. All the hard > > >>>drive does is turn and turn and turn for hours until I get tired and > > >>>unplug it. > > >>> > > >>>Device Manager says the device is working perfectly. > > >>> > > >>>I have even tried one of those internal IDE plug adapters. > > >>> > > >>>I don't know if I need to set jumpers or what but I have tried > > >>>everything I possibly know how to try. > > >>> > > >>>Does anyone know of any other possible way or some other method to get > > >>>data off this laptop hard drive? > > >>> > > >>>Or is there something I am possibly doing wrong with the devices I have > > >>>because most of these devices come with absolutely no or very little > > >>>directions. > > >>> > > >>>Help please ! > > >>> > > >>>:) > > >>> > > > > > > |
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