Chance of data recovery from an unreadable microSD card
I have sent my dead microSD card to a data recovery company, but it could not help me.
The following is the diagnosis by the company. Can the existing technology help rescue my data?
Unfortunately, it is not possible to rescue the data from your order.
We assumed the controller on your memory card is damaged. In these
cases, we try to read the raw data out from the masked wiring from the
back side of the card (see the photo from the back side of your card
in the attachment), but it failed. That circumstance makes the data
rescue no longer possible. The following causes for the failure of the
storage medium come into question: a) A short-term voltage peak
occurred from a connected device destroyed an electronic module in the
memory device b) A previous production damage in the device, which has
deteriorated by the continuous heating and cooling during the use and
eventually lead to failure. c) A neutron, originating from cosmic
rays, encountered an electronic device and destroyed them d) An alpha
particle, emitted by radioactive contamination of the storage medium
materials, has struck an electronic component and destroyed them.
power flash controller
migrated from electronics.stackexchange.com Feb 4 '15 at 20:52
This question came from our site for electronics and electrical engineering professionals, students, and enthusiasts.
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I have sent my dead microSD card to a data recovery company, but it could not help me.
The following is the diagnosis by the company. Can the existing technology help rescue my data?
Unfortunately, it is not possible to rescue the data from your order.
We assumed the controller on your memory card is damaged. In these
cases, we try to read the raw data out from the masked wiring from the
back side of the card (see the photo from the back side of your card
in the attachment), but it failed. That circumstance makes the data
rescue no longer possible. The following causes for the failure of the
storage medium come into question: a) A short-term voltage peak
occurred from a connected device destroyed an electronic module in the
memory device b) A previous production damage in the device, which has
deteriorated by the continuous heating and cooling during the use and
eventually lead to failure. c) A neutron, originating from cosmic
rays, encountered an electronic device and destroyed them d) An alpha
particle, emitted by radioactive contamination of the storage medium
materials, has struck an electronic component and destroyed them.
power flash controller
migrated from electronics.stackexchange.com Feb 4 '15 at 20:52
This question came from our site for electronics and electrical engineering professionals, students, and enthusiasts.
1
Looks like the professionals gave their opinion.
– Eugene Sh.
Feb 4 '15 at 20:20
4
The best advice I could give is give up and use 'C' as the reason it failed. If you're going to lose data it may as well be due to a cool reason.
– Samuel
Feb 4 '15 at 20:26
Chances are reasonable that some data could be recovered by some means, but you can expect the cost and required tools and/or skill level to increase exponentially with the difficulty. If you have $50M worth of Bitcoins on there there is probably a way.
– Spehro Pefhany
Feb 4 '15 at 21:06
Try downloading "Recuva" for Windows. I've recovered many damaged SD cards that way. It's free so no harm in trying.
– cbmeeks
Feb 4 '15 at 21:09
1
@cbmeeks Complete waste of time. If you can't get at the data by bypassing the controller, a simple software solution would have not a hope. Two lessons learned, though... 1) never keep anything important on an SD card & 2) Any data stored in less than three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary.
– Tetsujin
Feb 5 '15 at 8:49
|
show 1 more comment
I have sent my dead microSD card to a data recovery company, but it could not help me.
The following is the diagnosis by the company. Can the existing technology help rescue my data?
Unfortunately, it is not possible to rescue the data from your order.
We assumed the controller on your memory card is damaged. In these
cases, we try to read the raw data out from the masked wiring from the
back side of the card (see the photo from the back side of your card
in the attachment), but it failed. That circumstance makes the data
rescue no longer possible. The following causes for the failure of the
storage medium come into question: a) A short-term voltage peak
occurred from a connected device destroyed an electronic module in the
memory device b) A previous production damage in the device, which has
deteriorated by the continuous heating and cooling during the use and
eventually lead to failure. c) A neutron, originating from cosmic
rays, encountered an electronic device and destroyed them d) An alpha
particle, emitted by radioactive contamination of the storage medium
materials, has struck an electronic component and destroyed them.
power flash controller
I have sent my dead microSD card to a data recovery company, but it could not help me.
The following is the diagnosis by the company. Can the existing technology help rescue my data?
Unfortunately, it is not possible to rescue the data from your order.
We assumed the controller on your memory card is damaged. In these
cases, we try to read the raw data out from the masked wiring from the
back side of the card (see the photo from the back side of your card
in the attachment), but it failed. That circumstance makes the data
rescue no longer possible. The following causes for the failure of the
storage medium come into question: a) A short-term voltage peak
occurred from a connected device destroyed an electronic module in the
memory device b) A previous production damage in the device, which has
deteriorated by the continuous heating and cooling during the use and
eventually lead to failure. c) A neutron, originating from cosmic
rays, encountered an electronic device and destroyed them d) An alpha
particle, emitted by radioactive contamination of the storage medium
materials, has struck an electronic component and destroyed them.
power flash controller
power flash controller
edited Feb 5 '15 at 21:12
JakeGould
32.1k1098141
32.1k1098141
asked Feb 4 '15 at 20:08
dolcevita
migrated from electronics.stackexchange.com Feb 4 '15 at 20:52
This question came from our site for electronics and electrical engineering professionals, students, and enthusiasts.
migrated from electronics.stackexchange.com Feb 4 '15 at 20:52
This question came from our site for electronics and electrical engineering professionals, students, and enthusiasts.
1
Looks like the professionals gave their opinion.
– Eugene Sh.
Feb 4 '15 at 20:20
4
The best advice I could give is give up and use 'C' as the reason it failed. If you're going to lose data it may as well be due to a cool reason.
– Samuel
Feb 4 '15 at 20:26
Chances are reasonable that some data could be recovered by some means, but you can expect the cost and required tools and/or skill level to increase exponentially with the difficulty. If you have $50M worth of Bitcoins on there there is probably a way.
– Spehro Pefhany
Feb 4 '15 at 21:06
Try downloading "Recuva" for Windows. I've recovered many damaged SD cards that way. It's free so no harm in trying.
– cbmeeks
Feb 4 '15 at 21:09
1
@cbmeeks Complete waste of time. If you can't get at the data by bypassing the controller, a simple software solution would have not a hope. Two lessons learned, though... 1) never keep anything important on an SD card & 2) Any data stored in less than three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary.
– Tetsujin
Feb 5 '15 at 8:49
|
show 1 more comment
1
Looks like the professionals gave their opinion.
– Eugene Sh.
Feb 4 '15 at 20:20
4
The best advice I could give is give up and use 'C' as the reason it failed. If you're going to lose data it may as well be due to a cool reason.
– Samuel
Feb 4 '15 at 20:26
Chances are reasonable that some data could be recovered by some means, but you can expect the cost and required tools and/or skill level to increase exponentially with the difficulty. If you have $50M worth of Bitcoins on there there is probably a way.
– Spehro Pefhany
Feb 4 '15 at 21:06
Try downloading "Recuva" for Windows. I've recovered many damaged SD cards that way. It's free so no harm in trying.
– cbmeeks
Feb 4 '15 at 21:09
1
@cbmeeks Complete waste of time. If you can't get at the data by bypassing the controller, a simple software solution would have not a hope. Two lessons learned, though... 1) never keep anything important on an SD card & 2) Any data stored in less than three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary.
– Tetsujin
Feb 5 '15 at 8:49
1
1
Looks like the professionals gave their opinion.
– Eugene Sh.
Feb 4 '15 at 20:20
Looks like the professionals gave their opinion.
– Eugene Sh.
Feb 4 '15 at 20:20
4
4
The best advice I could give is give up and use 'C' as the reason it failed. If you're going to lose data it may as well be due to a cool reason.
– Samuel
Feb 4 '15 at 20:26
The best advice I could give is give up and use 'C' as the reason it failed. If you're going to lose data it may as well be due to a cool reason.
– Samuel
Feb 4 '15 at 20:26
Chances are reasonable that some data could be recovered by some means, but you can expect the cost and required tools and/or skill level to increase exponentially with the difficulty. If you have $50M worth of Bitcoins on there there is probably a way.
– Spehro Pefhany
Feb 4 '15 at 21:06
Chances are reasonable that some data could be recovered by some means, but you can expect the cost and required tools and/or skill level to increase exponentially with the difficulty. If you have $50M worth of Bitcoins on there there is probably a way.
– Spehro Pefhany
Feb 4 '15 at 21:06
Try downloading "Recuva" for Windows. I've recovered many damaged SD cards that way. It's free so no harm in trying.
– cbmeeks
Feb 4 '15 at 21:09
Try downloading "Recuva" for Windows. I've recovered many damaged SD cards that way. It's free so no harm in trying.
– cbmeeks
Feb 4 '15 at 21:09
1
1
@cbmeeks Complete waste of time. If you can't get at the data by bypassing the controller, a simple software solution would have not a hope. Two lessons learned, though... 1) never keep anything important on an SD card & 2) Any data stored in less than three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary.
– Tetsujin
Feb 5 '15 at 8:49
@cbmeeks Complete waste of time. If you can't get at the data by bypassing the controller, a simple software solution would have not a hope. Two lessons learned, though... 1) never keep anything important on an SD card & 2) Any data stored in less than three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary.
– Tetsujin
Feb 5 '15 at 8:49
|
show 1 more comment
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
To translate into plain English:
A flash storage device (thumb drive, SSD drive, MicroSD card, etc.) consists of two parts: one or more storage chips, and a controller chip to coordinate things. Most of the time, when a drive fails, it's because of a problem with the controller chip: the data is still sitting there, but can't be accessed through normal means.
What the data recovery company did was open up the drive and bypass the controller chip, accessing the storage chips directly. When they did this, they were unable to get any data from them. Of the possible causes they listed, the likely ones are a voltage spike (static electricity can damage the chips, rendering them partly or completely unreadable), or hot/cold cycles causing either wires within the chips or the chips themselves to break. Cosmic rays and alpha particles usually cause problems with RAM, not flash, and the problems are temporary.
Data recovery may still be possible on a theoretical level, but it's going to cost far, far more. Instead of spending a few hundred dollars for a data recovery company, you'll be spending a few hundred thousand dollars or more for a university-level laboratory to disassemble the chips and read the memory cells directly -- and there's still no certainty that you'll recover anything.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
To translate into plain English:
A flash storage device (thumb drive, SSD drive, MicroSD card, etc.) consists of two parts: one or more storage chips, and a controller chip to coordinate things. Most of the time, when a drive fails, it's because of a problem with the controller chip: the data is still sitting there, but can't be accessed through normal means.
What the data recovery company did was open up the drive and bypass the controller chip, accessing the storage chips directly. When they did this, they were unable to get any data from them. Of the possible causes they listed, the likely ones are a voltage spike (static electricity can damage the chips, rendering them partly or completely unreadable), or hot/cold cycles causing either wires within the chips or the chips themselves to break. Cosmic rays and alpha particles usually cause problems with RAM, not flash, and the problems are temporary.
Data recovery may still be possible on a theoretical level, but it's going to cost far, far more. Instead of spending a few hundred dollars for a data recovery company, you'll be spending a few hundred thousand dollars or more for a university-level laboratory to disassemble the chips and read the memory cells directly -- and there's still no certainty that you'll recover anything.
add a comment |
To translate into plain English:
A flash storage device (thumb drive, SSD drive, MicroSD card, etc.) consists of two parts: one or more storage chips, and a controller chip to coordinate things. Most of the time, when a drive fails, it's because of a problem with the controller chip: the data is still sitting there, but can't be accessed through normal means.
What the data recovery company did was open up the drive and bypass the controller chip, accessing the storage chips directly. When they did this, they were unable to get any data from them. Of the possible causes they listed, the likely ones are a voltage spike (static electricity can damage the chips, rendering them partly or completely unreadable), or hot/cold cycles causing either wires within the chips or the chips themselves to break. Cosmic rays and alpha particles usually cause problems with RAM, not flash, and the problems are temporary.
Data recovery may still be possible on a theoretical level, but it's going to cost far, far more. Instead of spending a few hundred dollars for a data recovery company, you'll be spending a few hundred thousand dollars or more for a university-level laboratory to disassemble the chips and read the memory cells directly -- and there's still no certainty that you'll recover anything.
add a comment |
To translate into plain English:
A flash storage device (thumb drive, SSD drive, MicroSD card, etc.) consists of two parts: one or more storage chips, and a controller chip to coordinate things. Most of the time, when a drive fails, it's because of a problem with the controller chip: the data is still sitting there, but can't be accessed through normal means.
What the data recovery company did was open up the drive and bypass the controller chip, accessing the storage chips directly. When they did this, they were unable to get any data from them. Of the possible causes they listed, the likely ones are a voltage spike (static electricity can damage the chips, rendering them partly or completely unreadable), or hot/cold cycles causing either wires within the chips or the chips themselves to break. Cosmic rays and alpha particles usually cause problems with RAM, not flash, and the problems are temporary.
Data recovery may still be possible on a theoretical level, but it's going to cost far, far more. Instead of spending a few hundred dollars for a data recovery company, you'll be spending a few hundred thousand dollars or more for a university-level laboratory to disassemble the chips and read the memory cells directly -- and there's still no certainty that you'll recover anything.
To translate into plain English:
A flash storage device (thumb drive, SSD drive, MicroSD card, etc.) consists of two parts: one or more storage chips, and a controller chip to coordinate things. Most of the time, when a drive fails, it's because of a problem with the controller chip: the data is still sitting there, but can't be accessed through normal means.
What the data recovery company did was open up the drive and bypass the controller chip, accessing the storage chips directly. When they did this, they were unable to get any data from them. Of the possible causes they listed, the likely ones are a voltage spike (static electricity can damage the chips, rendering them partly or completely unreadable), or hot/cold cycles causing either wires within the chips or the chips themselves to break. Cosmic rays and alpha particles usually cause problems with RAM, not flash, and the problems are temporary.
Data recovery may still be possible on a theoretical level, but it's going to cost far, far more. Instead of spending a few hundred dollars for a data recovery company, you'll be spending a few hundred thousand dollars or more for a university-level laboratory to disassemble the chips and read the memory cells directly -- and there's still no certainty that you'll recover anything.
answered Feb 4 '15 at 21:21
MarkMark
1,13711018
1,13711018
add a comment |
add a comment |
1
Looks like the professionals gave their opinion.
– Eugene Sh.
Feb 4 '15 at 20:20
4
The best advice I could give is give up and use 'C' as the reason it failed. If you're going to lose data it may as well be due to a cool reason.
– Samuel
Feb 4 '15 at 20:26
Chances are reasonable that some data could be recovered by some means, but you can expect the cost and required tools and/or skill level to increase exponentially with the difficulty. If you have $50M worth of Bitcoins on there there is probably a way.
– Spehro Pefhany
Feb 4 '15 at 21:06
Try downloading "Recuva" for Windows. I've recovered many damaged SD cards that way. It's free so no harm in trying.
– cbmeeks
Feb 4 '15 at 21:09
1
@cbmeeks Complete waste of time. If you can't get at the data by bypassing the controller, a simple software solution would have not a hope. Two lessons learned, though... 1) never keep anything important on an SD card & 2) Any data stored in less than three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary.
– Tetsujin
Feb 5 '15 at 8:49