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Re: [OM] DAMN!

Subject: Re: [OM] DAMN!
From: Chuck Norcutt <chucknorcutt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sat, 6 Aug 2016 23:15:19 -0400
What Moose said. Under NO circumstances should you reformat that drive or write ANYTHING to it. The actual damage done from the failing write a shutdown is probably fairly small. But you do need some smart software to try and fit the pieces back together. Spinrite is a class act (I first used it more than 20 years ago) but it will cost you $89. You may be able to find something cheaper or even free but it may not be as good. You should be pleased with Spinrite since it runs under DOS.

Moose has made strong suggestions that you invest in some backup drives. If it was me the first use of one of those backup drives would be to use Reflect (mentioned by Moose) to make a clone of the drive in it existing condition. If the recovery software makes a further mess of the drive in its recovery attempt you will have another copy which can be cloned again for the next attempt. You will also need a USB drive dock which, if only operating on USB 2.0 will be quite slow. You can find them for under $20.

Chuck Norcutt


On 8/6/2016 7:20 PM, Moose wrote:
On 8/6/2016 3:39 PM, Chris Trask wrote:
      Well, it finally happened.  Three weeks ago there was a power
glitch here when shutting down the one laptop, and the result was that
the directory of my external hard drive

"Drive" should have been plural.

With all the time, angst and effort you spend protecting yourself
against largely imagined external threats . . . With all the words
posted here about back-up strategies . . .

  ... so before I go to the final step and format the drive I'd like
to hear

What, one foot left uninjured? Why, in the name of all that's digital,
would you reformat?

First, you are working with an unproven assumption, that it isn't the
drive that had the corrupting hiccup. If it was, you are setting
yourself up for another opportunity to use this subject line.

Second, who knows when someone will come up with, or you will discover,
the recovery program you need? Then, having reformatted this drive, you
will have another opportunity to use this subject line.

Rational strategy is to keep and label the existing drive, then buy two
new, identical drives, one for use, one for back-up.

You should have back-up drives for each active drive. For image, text,
spreadsheet files, etc. file by file back-up is good. For OS disks,
cloning software is the answer. Macirum Reflect Free is excellent for
creating B-U clone disks.

I wish you luck with a full recovery.

Shakespeare Moose

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