Originally Posted by
bcrepurposing
i have commented in past on this but will repeat a bit of what i said before.
removing the boards will deter a average person. not a person intent retreaving your data. it is possible to figure out what board belongs there by trial error on known used parts.
my suggestion comes from experiance. i have 13 years as a repair tech and have done data recovery / sent out mangled devices for recovery so know whats possible.
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It's really not like what you're making it out to be. The most common reason that HDD's die is because of a circuit failure on the logic board somewhere. As hard drive repair goes it's a relatively simple fix.
1: You look at ALL of the information on the front of the drive and locate an identical drive that was manufactured in the same month.
2: There's something like a ROM chip on the circuit board. That stores information that is almost unique to that particular drive. (It's something like a fingerprint.) The information tells the rest of the drive where to go and what to do.
Without that (specific) information the drive will spin up and sit there clicking.
3: The easiest way to transfer that ROM data over to your donor board is to send it out to a company with the equipment to do that job.
Here's where the problem comes in : Somebody hands you a random hard drive where the logic board is completely missing !
The level of difficulty just increased tenfold. All of that ROM information is lost. It takes very specialized equipment to re-discover it.
You're looking at a capital outlay of around 20 grand for that kind of gear and years of training in HDD repair.
True .... it can be done, but why on earth would somebody go to all the trouble for a criminal enterprise ?
There's tons more money to be made in legitimate data recovery and no risk of prosecution.
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