Can anyone help me out or refer me to someone who can? I figure its worth about $100 to me. More than that and I'll just cry into my beer and make sure she backs up more often.

LOL...you have been out for a while.pbwalker wrote:Replacing the motherboard will likely introduce a different RAID controller. I have never heard of a RAID recovery working with a different controller. All it will want to do is initialize the drives, and doing so will erase important config data on the drives (it's been about 10+ years since I was a hardware guy, so things may have changed these days). Also, you can't take one drive from a RAID 0, plug it in via USB, and copy data. It only has 50% of your data. :)
a laptop with a RAID 0? I assume this is some kind of software RAID? I haven't come across a laptop with more than one HDD bay myself, but I am sure they are out there. What model laptop is it?
http://www.runtime.org/raid.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; <-- this should fix your RAID issue. The demo will tell you if it can before you shell out the $99 to fix it.
And in the future, run a RAID 1. :-)
Nice! I had no idea...I always was the kind of buyer that had to get the smallest, ultra-portable type machines...so I never got in to the desktop replacement systems. Those have got to weigh more than my 3lb Macbook Air.olafpfj wrote:LOL...you have been out for a while.pbwalker wrote:Replacing the motherboard will likely introduce a different RAID controller. I have never heard of a RAID recovery working with a different controller. All it will want to do is initialize the drives, and doing so will erase important config data on the drives (it's been about 10+ years since I was a hardware guy, so things may have changed these days). Also, you can't take one drive from a RAID 0, plug it in via USB, and copy data. It only has 50% of your data. :)
a laptop with a RAID 0? I assume this is some kind of software RAID? I haven't come across a laptop with more than one HDD bay myself, but I am sure they are out there. What model laptop is it?
http://www.runtime.org/raid.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; <-- this should fix your RAID issue. The demo will tell you if it can before you shell out the $99 to fix it.
And in the future, run a RAID 1. :-)
My old Alienware was RAID 1 and I have a Dell XPS that is RAID 0.
Its a Dell Inspiron 1721 that came standard RAID 0. Its quite common (at least the ones I get) for laptops to have RAID 0 on them these days. I have already bought a new computer since the dead one was 4 years old and I can't justify trying to fix it. I have the drives mounted in an external RAID enclosure that I got from FRY's to try and recover the data but I've learned that you have to use the exact same hardware controller if you want the drives to mount.
I'll check out those links...Thanks