Hosed ext3 superblock
Jerry Feldman
gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org
Wed Jun 2 10:42:30 EDT 2010
On 06/02/2010 10:23 AM, Ling Cheung wrote:
> (Pardon the poor formatting below. Web mail is annoying.)
>
> --- On Wed, 6/2/10, Jerry Feldman<gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org> wrote:
>
>
>> Just make sure you take an image of that drive so if you
>> screw up your
>> have an out. Additionally, there are data recovery
>> companies that will
>> recover your data. Since the hardware is working, it should
>> be less
>> expensive. If you decide to go this route, make sure you
>> check their
>> reputation. A couple of years ago when one of my HDs died
>> and I was
>> unaware that my backup was corrupted (32-bit system with a
>> virtual
>> machine that screwed it up), I sent the drive to a company
>> in Chicago
>> since the only local companies with good reputations
>> locally were too
>> expensive.
>>
> I'm doing the fsck on the image of the hard drive now. It does not look encouraging, and I imagine that I'll have to use a data recovery service.
>
> I was planning on trying out Tech Fusion, since they're conveniently located to me, but I hadn't thought about shopping around to the extent that you did. How did you check reputations? And do you recall the Chicago company's name?
>
>
>
If I recall, Tech Fusion the one place to run away from. They were the
first place I contacted, then I checked up on them and got a lot of bad
vibes. Secondly, a company I was with 20 years ago used them with not
very good results. The company I ended up using was ESS Data Recovery.
(http://www.datarecovery.com/). First of all, there was no up front cost
If they were unsuccessful. The next thing is they sent me the recovered
data on a larger USB drive than was in the contract, which was a good
thing. I originally sent my drive to Aero Data Recovery
(http://www.aerodr.com) as they had a good reputation. They were unable
to repair my drive, and they sent it to ESS (with my permission at no
cost). Aero is now owned by ESS. I can send you a list of the companies
I researched, but not the results of my search because I did not retain
those. The main thing I needed was my checkbook, because it would have
taken me a long time to rebuild all the transactions from my backup. The
other thing that I was not able to recover from my backup was my email.
ESS was able to successfully recover 100% of my data, but the cost was
about $1000. Since your disk probably does not require a clean room you
may get off cheaper.
--
Jerry Feldman<gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org>
Boston Linux and Unix
PGP key id: 537C5846
PGP Key fingerprint: 3D1B 8377 A3C0 A5F2 ECBB CA3B 4607 4319 537C 5846
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