hard disk failure - now what?
Jerry McAllister
jerrymc at msu.edu
Wed Aug 26 20:49:17 UTC 2009
On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 10:23:47PM +0200, Roland Smith wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 12:13:48PM -0700, George Davidovich wrote:
> <snip>
> > > If the drive is that bad, it is doubtfull if dd or ddrescue will be
> > > able to get a good copy.
> >
> > Probably true. I hesitate to suggest this, but sticking the drive in a
> > freezer (preferrably in a ziplock bag) for a few hours or overnight
> > might help. Stories from people claiming "I swear it works!" go back
> > years.
>
> Interesting.
>
> > To the exent it does work, it might give Kelly enough time to attempt
> > recovery. If more time is required, he can try and find a creative
> > workaround for the 5 meter max length for USB cables. Also,
> > experimenting with dry ice or acetone baths might prove to be
> > interesting, or at least educational. ;-)
>
>
> I remember this special non-condictive 3M fluid that can be used to cool
> electronics. A group of hackers dunked a complete PC minus the case and power
> supply in this stuff. The fluid itself was cooled with liquid nitrogen. They
> everclocked it something wicked. Not very practical though. :-)
A number of supercomputers from Cray and Control Data and maybe some
other places used this sort of thing on some experimental systems. I
don't know if any ever were put in to commercial production. They submerged
who boards in to it and then supercooled the fluid. I don't remember
the chemical names.
The fluid was a relative of Freon and held sufficient levels of oxygen
to support lung breathers. They used to have a tank with a live mouse
submerged in it bouncing around and seeming to have no trouble not
choking or drowning. A variation of it was also researched as a blood
substitute for some special medical needs. I don't know how far that
went. I know it is not all fantasy because I saw the live mouse.
I didn't try the blood substitute.
////jerry
>
> Roland
> --
> R.F.Smith http://www.xs4all.nl/~rsmith/
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