However, it would still not come up in either Windows or Linux as a valid drive. It found the typical one unrecoverable sector in the early sectors of the drive - did some recovery and then finished. I set it up through a USB to IDE adapter and set SpinRite to going. Knowing that these people have had a lot of knocks in their lives, I thought I'd help them out and wound up taking the old computer home.
That old story, repeated countless times between you and Leo on Security Now! began to play in my head - ending with that well remembered line '. About two weeks ago they mentioned they had an old computer in the back that they would like to have the data from. I swing in often and I've tweaked their computers here and there as asked. In the past couple of years I have become quite good friends with a couple and their family that run a store and lunch counter near where my parents live. Since the story behind this is interesting, I thought I would relay it to you. Most of my customers (I own a small consulting firm on the side) have finally been convinced of the need to back up their data and even when a hard drive fails, it is usually an inconvenience, not total disaster.Įarlier today, I tweeted you a quick picture entitled 'DynaStat Engaged!' showing SpinRite going to work on a drive that I am glad to say was successfully helped by your product. I purchased SpinRite some time ago and have had few occasions (thankfully) to use it. Hello Steve and the rest of the GRC team, Thanks again for the podcast and SpinRite! I reinstalled the drive into the server and it is now working correctly and performing at its normal speed! I had been meaning to run SpinRite on the drive but didn't get around to it until last week, and when I tried to halt the system, I discovered that it was running so slowly that several night's worth of backups were still running, the drive was completely unresponsive, and I eventually just had to power down the machine.I ran SpinRite on Level 4 for a little over 24 hours - there were no errors reported and, again, the SMART data seemed ok. Since this is a nightly task that has run for years, I have been able to watch the hard drive transfer rate steadily decreasing over the past few months until the point where it was obvious that something was wrong, even though the SMART data that I had also been collecting didn't seem unusual or to be deteriorating. This is a fairly mundane success story, but I have a NetBSD server which does a nightly backup to an 8 year old 2TB hard drive. The later thanks to you and your selfless research with your own n=1 Ketogenic experiment. In the mean time, reserve me a copy of whatever the latest version is.īob Johnson, avid Spinrite user, Ketonian, and defeater of diabetes.
When I have time to poke around, I'll find you guys. Am I correct in my understanding that only those that find their way to your forum/usefeed/hideaway of testers get to beta test? OK then, challenge accepted. I have caught you from time to time mentioning your group of testers. The best money I have ever spent, hands down. So when Spinrite 6 came out in 2004 I immediately bought one. We had a copy of Ver 5 (I can not vouch for its license, but we used it to recover many a crashed drive). During that time I was in the USAF and was my fighter squadrons SCM (small computer manager). Sometimes it will warn of more serious impending trouble : You just run it and SpinRite fixes everything that's wrong. īecause it is based on solid science and proven engineering, SpinRite routinely performs miracles of data recovery for 1/100th the cost of independent third-party data recovery services. Please take a moment to read some of the unsolicited feedback we continually receive from SpinRite owners who are, as you can see for yourself, often amazed, stunned, and quite grateful for what SpinRite was able to do for them.