Always interesting where people store their "important" data. I can 100% see the use case with memory cards going bad between a video or photo shoot and ingesting the media, but storing important stuff, no backup, on a USB stick?
Out of pure curiosity: Ever had a flash device where the charge in the NAND has dissipated over time, rendering the data truly irrecoverable? I don’t think many people are aware flash media basically means storing data as capacitive charge, which means it’s not at all suitable for archival storage!
It blows me away that people think flash storage is a great way to back up there only copy of their data. It’s always going to be susceptible to bit rot. You wouldn’t even need recovery services if people kept multiple backup of their stuff.
128MB? Still got my first two flash sticks - 32MB each, and über slow even for USB 1! Just thankful I was using them as an alternative to floppies! :-D They still work to this day, mind! :-) (Waiting for somebody to chime in with a 2MB flash stick that came from a shop, not from eBay! xD)
Erkin, I have pc3000 and vnr but not flash extractor , do you suggest i buy it ,can we have a video on comparision of these three tools from your opinion
Good Morning. I am an admirer of your services and I follow all your videos. Great. I saw that instead of using a cabin, it uses a vacuum type system. Would you be able to post the schematic of the vacuum cleaner and where to find it, especially the inlet mouth that is on the table? Thank you very much in advance. Success always there in your activities.
Hello, HDD Recovery Services. First of all, great channel. A have a question which is going to sound stupid. I've watched some HDD to sand grinder conversion tutorials on youtube and tried it out with my old SATA and PATA HDD. They spin for a few seconds but stops. The tutorial shows that shorting pin 2 and 6 OR pin 3 and 5 (Rx and Tx) of SATA Data line will make the motor spin continuously. I tried it but it doesn't spin at all. Can you suggest a way to make an old SATA and PATA HDD motor spin continuously? Thank you.
Hi. Thanks for the amazing content that you are making. I have a 1TB western digital hard that has a head problem due to falling and a recovery company changed it's heads and said head swapping was not successful and it's data was not recoverable, can I do anything else or is there any hope that a second change of heads by someone skillful like you help recover my most valuable data? You're answer will help a person in need a lot and bring back hope to several families. I'm waiting for your answer. thank you.
Not really a recovery task, but for most USB sticks the manufacturers software is what allows you to set options, including write protection, but also serial number, what device to emulate, and other stuff.
Yes, count yourself lucky, copy your data off and buy a new one. Do you really want to mess with a USB stick that spontaneously decided to break itself?
this video showed the preliminary procedure on how to get started in setting up the nand structure to be readable. This video shows NOTHING about how to recover flash data from the nand. so this video is just pointless or just mis-labeled title at best.
@@joeydelmarsjr.646 If you can't figure out how to copy the data after getting a working image, these aren't the videos to be watching. Not trying to be condescending, but filesystem recovery is "level 2" so to speak; this is level 3.
Why sleep when you can watch a data recovery video 🤣🤣
Always interesting where people store their "important" data. I can 100% see the use case with memory cards going bad between a video or photo shoot and ingesting the media, but storing important stuff, no backup, on a USB stick?
It's called being poor or just dumb.
I cannot trust cloud for noodles.
Out of pure curiosity: Ever had a flash device where the charge in the NAND has dissipated over time, rendering the data truly irrecoverable?
I don’t think many people are aware flash media basically means storing data as capacitive charge, which means it’s not at all suitable for archival storage!
It blows me away that people think flash storage is a great way to back up there only copy of their data. It’s always going to be susceptible to bit rot. You wouldn’t even need recovery services if people kept multiple backup of their stuff.
HAHAHA gotta love that big ass solder ball for the ground.
Super old with 8GB? Still got a working 128MB. Feel old myself, now.
He's a young guy :D. I remember when computer memory was only talked about in bytes :D
@@superslammer We had a used Commodore +4 with datasette in the erarly 90s. Later a floppy drive. The big bendable ones.
128MB? Still got my first two flash sticks - 32MB each, and über slow even for USB 1! Just thankful I was using them as an alternative to floppies! :-D
They still work to this day, mind! :-)
(Waiting for somebody to chime in with a 2MB flash stick that came from a shop, not from eBay! xD)
Erkin,
I have pc3000 and vnr but not flash extractor , do you suggest i buy it ,can we have a video on comparision of these three tools from your opinion
Good Morning. I am an admirer of your services and I follow all your videos. Great. I saw that instead of using a cabin, it uses a vacuum type system. Would you be able to post the schematic of the vacuum cleaner and where to find it, especially the inlet mouth that is on the table?
Thank you very much in advance.
Success always there in your activities.
Hello, HDD Recovery Services. First of all, great channel. A have a question which is going to sound stupid. I've watched some HDD to sand grinder conversion tutorials on youtube and tried it out with my old SATA and PATA HDD. They spin for a few seconds but stops. The tutorial shows that shorting pin 2 and 6 OR pin 3 and 5 (Rx and Tx) of SATA Data line will make the motor spin continuously. I tried it but it doesn't spin at all. Can you suggest a way to make an old SATA and PATA HDD motor spin continuously? Thank you.
It depends on PCB.
@@hddrecoveryservices ok, Thank you.
Nice job my friend
I have an USB flash from 2004 and he's still worki5
Hi. Thanks for the amazing content that you are making. I have a 1TB western digital hard that has a head problem due to falling and a recovery company changed it's heads and said head swapping was not successful and it's data was not recoverable, can I do anything else or is there any hope that a second change of heads by someone skillful like you help recover my most valuable data?
You're answer will help a person in need a lot and bring back hope to several families. I'm waiting for your answer. thank you.
It is great to see you in the action 30 days challenge, thank you for supporting the community. I have some questions, could we interact by email?
What is the name of the software that you are using?
PC 3000, says so in the top-left of the software window
Its softcenter flashextractor
yes!, I can recovered!
Is there anything you can do if the flash drive gives you write protected message
Not really a recovery task, but for most USB sticks the manufacturers software is what allows you to set options, including write protection, but also serial number, what device to emulate, and other stuff.
I have a flash drive and can't write to it every time I try comes up right protected is there a way around this thanks
Yes, count yourself lucky, copy your data off and buy a new one. Do you really want to mess with a USB stick that spontaneously decided to break itself?
It's only for music, nothing important, just would be handy to carry on using it
Is there anyway you can recover my data on my corrupt 256gb micro sd card. It has at least 5 yrs of memories on it. Im from ph by the way 😭😭😭
Amezing video
this video showed the preliminary procedure on how to get started in setting up the nand structure to be readable. This video shows NOTHING about how to recover flash data from the nand. so this video is just pointless or just mis-labeled title at best.
you clearly didn't watch the whole thing. So before you make a meaningless paragraph comment do me a favor and watch the video to the end son.
@@hddrecoveryservices you ended the video too soon, didnt see actual data being recovered. that what im saying
@@joeydelmarsjr.646 If you can't figure out how to copy the data after getting a working image, these aren't the videos to be watching. Not trying to be condescending, but filesystem recovery is "level 2" so to speak; this is level 3.