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Vo1dless2017-01-11 21:48:20
Iron
Vo1dless, 2017-01-11 21:48:20

Seegate Barracuda Hard Drive Died?

Good day!
There is a hard drive (Seegate Barracuda 3TB model ST3000DM001), used to store photos and files (the main ones are family photo and video archives).
Worked for about 1.5 years and at one point just stopped responding. How it happened - did not find, walked out of the room.
When starting up, the PC makes a characteristic sound (ala ticking) and after a few seconds it stops completely. After rebooting the PC, everything repeats. Didn't check on 2 PCs, they didn't see it.
I tried to contact Seagate support - to no avail.
I am attaching a video: https://youtu.be/LTORlCNHLTY (I hope you can hear the sound that he makes)
Thank you to everyone who answers this cry of the soul (about 1 terabyte of the family archive...)

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5 answer(s)
1
15432, 2017-01-11
@15432

I recommend for acquaintance
https://habrahabr.ru/post/251941/

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Puma Thailand, 2017-01-12
@opium

We go to the office for data recovery and they will return everything, well, welcome to backups

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Vladimir Kuzin, 2017-01-12
@Bobson8

Exactly the same barracudas rained down on me in a raid 5 pieces per month, one after one, having worked for a little over a year. Before that, for no apparent reason, SAS constellation es.3 died in the amount of 4x. Recently, Seagate has been producing products of terrifying quality. In native Business Storage, from them, the disk died within half a year. Either this is a defective batch, or it's a hastily released shit in pursuit of a segment. I don't buy Seagate anymore. Try to take the disk to an office that specializes in extracting information from disks, there is no other way. Doing something on your own is tantamount to hitting a disk with a sledgehammer, 3 times :)

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Mikhail Miroshnichenko, 2017-01-12
@hetmansoftware

You can try to diagnose the problem yourself - https://hetmanrecovery.com/ru/recovery_news/diagno... But if you have no experience, then it's better not to. There is a good article about the sounds of failed disks, though in English - https://hetmanrecovery.com/recovery_news/identifyi...

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