- How to recover data from defective flash drives
- Posted by Roy on June 4th, 2008
Hello Group
I had one flash drive that is not recognized anymore if inserted in
any PC USB Slot,...meaning that is malfunctioning.
Is there a way to recover the data from it?
TIA
Roy
- Posted by Sjouke Burry on June 4th, 2008
Roy wrote:
with a magnifying glass.
Often it is a bad connection from the usb connector
to the printed circuit.
Bend the pins back into shape, and/or resolder them,
might restore it to temporary health.
- Posted by kony on June 5th, 2008
On Thu, 05 Jun 2008 01:40:08 +0200, Sjouke Burry
<burrynulnulfour@ppllaanneett.nnlll> wrote:
Agreed, that is a weak point in many of them, though before
tearing it open it might be good to try it on another system
just in case it's the system not the drive that's to blame.
As for last resorts, a good data recovery service should be
able to get the data off, if it's still held in the flash
chip but of course that could cost quite a bit though I
couldn't even guess a ballpark figure beyond hundreds of
dollars or more.
- Posted by Roy on June 5th, 2008
On Jun 5, 11:34*am, kony <s...@spam.com> wrote:
Thanks for the tips Sjouke Burry and Kony, but would like some
clarification what doyou mean by another system...do you mean another
PC run by a different OS ?
- Posted by Jabka Atu on June 5th, 2008
On Jun 5, 7:19 am, Roy <royba...@gmail.com> wrote:
The first question is on what OS did you check it ?
If you run some flavor of Linux distribution please provide the output
of lsusb.
If it is recognized then your usb chip works (the problem is
software) :
you can copy the stick using dd comand.
My guess is that your filesystem (on the stick) is malfunctioning
that can be fixed .
- Posted by kony on June 5th, 2008
On Wed, 4 Jun 2008 21:19:14 -0700 (PDT), Roy
<roybasan@gmail.com> wrote:
Another PC - could be same OS or different OS, that doesn't
matter so long as the other PC has demonstrated that it can
use USB removable storage and supports the filesystem on the
drive.