Wednesday, October 26, 2011

How to Recover Data from the Hard Drive of a Dead Laptop:

How to Recover Data from the Hard Drive of a Dead Laptop
Steps
Method 1 :

Purchase a "Laptop Hard Drive Adaptor Kit" to allow you to plug your laptop hard drive into a standard PC (2.5 TO 3.5 inch IDE HDD).
Find a functioning standard PC that can read the file system that was on the laptop. One would need Windows 2k/XP or a Linux distribution to read an NTFS/FAT file system, whereas only a Linux distribution can read the EXT3 file system.
Open up the case and add the laptop drive with adaptor kit as a secondary HDD. Be sure that you have set this drive to either Cable Select, or Slave, depending on the configuration of the system, and the available IDE ports.
Copy the data you need from the laptop drive to the main drive of the PC, or consider using removable storage for small files.


Method 2 :
Purchase or cannibalize a 2.5" USB 2.0 or Firewire drive enclosure.
Find a functioning standard PC with an open USB port (or firewire port, as applicable) that can read the file system that was on the laptop. One would need Windows 2k/XP or a Linux distribution to read an NTFS/FAT file system, whereas only a Linux distribution can read the EXT3 file system.
Plug it in, wait for the tones (and/or mount it if that is necessary in this system)
Copy the data you need from the laptop drive to the main drive of the PC, or consider using removable storage for small files.


Tips :
  •     You can find the adaptor kits on eBay by searching the terms in quotes in step 1. They cost less than $10 with shipping.
  •     You may also put the laptop drive with adaptor kit into an external drive enclosure if you have one.
  •     You may need to adjust the primary/slave jumper settings on the hard disks (both laptop and PC).
  •     When you are finished, the laptop drive can be secured in the PC case and left as a secondary disk on the PC, if you don't need it for anything else.

Warnings :
Don't despair if you are not able to read the contents of the drive. Check your connections, be sure that the drive was detected in BIOS, and try again.
In Linux, be sure to mount the file system as read-only before attempting. NTFS file systems can only be opened by default in read-only mode, without additional packages.