saving a wet harddrive?
saving a wet harddrive?
lets say a hardrive was submerged in water (but was not running at the moment) can I still get files off of it in some way?
:icon14:riddla wrote:if this was salt water at all he's fucked even if it was off.R00k wrote:That's not necessarily true. A lot of circuit boards (most of them in today's electronics) will work fine after getting wet, as long as they have dried off enough.
If you could take the drive apart, and use a blowdryer to dry all the parts, then it will probably work fine.
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
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Untrue.. unless its salt water, he COULD in theory dry it out and get the data off of it..Pooinyourmouth wrote:If the drive was under water for any lengh of time it's gone. If say you just dunked it for a second, you could dry it and it may work.
it might not be a stable HD anymore, but the data is salvagable (sp)
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
True, didn't think of that.riddla wrote:if this was salt water at all he's fucked even if it was off.R00k wrote:That's not necessarily true. A lot of circuit boards (most of them in today's electronics) will work fine after getting wet, as long as they have dried off enough.
If you could take the drive apart, and use a blowdryer to dry all the parts, then it will probably work fine.
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- Posts: 6216
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r3t wrote:disassembling a harddrive will result in a dead drive. There's a reason why harddrives are sealed, and that's dust and dirt. There's no way you could prevent any dust from getting on the platters.
Ive ripped apart HDs before, had a bad read/write head.. swapped one from another HD.. saved my data..
Its possible, just dont expect any long term use after..
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
Professional drive recovery companies recover data from badly burned drivers (not saying it's always succesful) but wouldn't they have to take it apart at least to some extent to service it?r3t wrote:disassembling a harddrive will result in a dead drive. There's a reason why harddrives are sealed, and that's dust and dirt. There's no way you could prevent any dust from getting on the platters.
Yes..dzjepp wrote:Professional drive recovery companies recover data from badly burned drivers (not saying it's always succesful) but wouldn't they have to take it apart at least to some extent to service it?r3t wrote:disassembling a harddrive will result in a dead drive. There's a reason why harddrives are sealed, and that's dust and dirt. There's no way you could prevent any dust from getting on the platters.
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
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Salt water will make no difference versus fresh water in a power-off immersion in the short term. If you can dry out the drive, you should be able to recover the data.
As time goes by, the residual salt will corrode the shit out of any metal it's contacted in the drive, much more so than fresh water.
If the power was on and salt water hit it, that's an instant paperweight. You can theoretically submerge anything electrical in distilled, deionized water, as there's nothing in it to conduct electricity. However, I'm not about to try it.
As time goes by, the residual salt will corrode the shit out of any metal it's contacted in the drive, much more so than fresh water.
If the power was on and salt water hit it, that's an instant paperweight. You can theoretically submerge anything electrical in distilled, deionized water, as there's nothing in it to conduct electricity. However, I'm not about to try it.
Last edited by Nightshade on Fri Oct 14, 2005 8:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Correct. If that small hole wasn't there at all then you could just replace the green board and the drive would be ok, no matter what kind of water you dropped it in.Foo wrote:At a guess it's because hard drive platters are in sealed units, with very small valves to allow air in/out. If immersed, the water may enter through this valve and will not drain back out.
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