Hi David, et al,
The principle of "My Hard Drive Died" is Scott Moulton, a highly
respected member of the forensics and white-hat scene here in the
Atlanta Metro Area.
https://myharddrivedied.com/
That said, I highly recommend copying the disk showing read errors onto
another disk, keeping the log of sectors replaced by zeros. Then
performing a file by file backup from the degraded array, using the copy
instead of the troubled drive.
*After* you recover what you can, examine the replaced sector list and
back-calculate what files, if any, were affected. This will give you a
limited and less expensive task to pay experts to solve. Or carry on
with whatever you ended up with. I think your odds are good.
And yes, the pros are not cheap.
On 1/22/22 9:23 AM, Roger Heflin wrote:
From the recovery I know about in the last 3 years, it was several
thousand US$ per TB for the recovery.
On Sat, Jan 22, 2022 at 1:33 AM Wols Lists <antlists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 21/01/2022 19:34, Wols Lists wrote:
On 21/01/2022 19:31, Wols Lists wrote:
Secondly, I'm sure I've dealt with these people in the past, although
I can't vouch for them ...
https://www.vogon-computer-evidence.com/our-story/
OUCH! Having found that page (which is pretty much as I remember the
company), the rest of the web site looks like a cobweb site. So I don;t
know what's happened, but it doesn't look promising ...
Following up further yes it certainly looks like a cobweb site. The
company was taken over by Ontrack - I've seen a couple of
recommendations for them. But I have to re-iterate I can't vouch for
them, just they are a big professional company that does that sort of thing.
Phil