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SAN Raid 0 Data Recovery Vestavia Hills 866-460-4726 Vestavia Hills SATA SAS RAID 0

Vestavia Hills, AL 35216
United States
866-460-4726 SAN Raid 0 Data Recovery Vestavia Hills Hard Drive Data Recovery - Vestavia Hills SATA SAS RAID 0 DATA RECOVERY - External Drive Raid Recovery - NAS SATA SAS RAID Data Recovery- Vestavia Hills SAN Data Links - Linux Data Recovery Vestavia Hills Macintosh SAN Data recovery - iPhone Android data recovery-Microsoft Windows data recovery - Vestavia Hills Raid Server Recovery - Raid Array Data Reconstruction - Unix Data Recovery Vestavia Hills Solid State SSD Drive Recovery - iPhone Data Links Vestavia Hills 866-460-4726

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Vestavia Hills Alabama

Raid 0 Data Recovery

Raid 0 Array Data Recovery for Vestavia Hills



866-460-4726

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US Data Recovery provides Vestavia Hills, Alabama Raid 0 Array Data Recovery Services for Home users, Business users, Corporations, Government entities, Military and Educational institution clients. Vestavia Hills Raid 0 Array Data Recovery includes recovery of SAS, SATA, IDE, SCSI , NL-SAS raid 0 arrays, any raid configuration used in laptops, desktops, workstations, Servers, NAS, DAS and SAN servers. We provide Vestavia Hills data recovery and data reconstruction of all software and hardware raid 0 arrays including:

Standard Raid Levels

Raid 0, Raid 1, Raid 2, Raid 3, Raid 4, Raid 5, Raid 6

Modified Standard Raid Levels - Nested Raid Levels

Raid 0 + 1 (raid 01), Raid 1 + 0 (raid 10), Raid 3 + 0 (raid 30 or raid 53), Raid 0 +3 (raid 03), Raid 1 +0 + 0 (raid100), Raid 5+ 0 (raid 50), Raid 5 + 1 (raid 51), Raid 0 + 5 (raid 05), raid 6 + 0 (raid 60)

Non Standard Raid Levels

Double Parity, Raid 5e, Raid 5ee, Raid 6e, Raid-DP, Raid1.5, Parity Raid, Matrix Raid, Raid K, Raid S, Raid Z, Beyond Raid, unRaid, Linux MD 10, IBM ServeRaid 1E, ineo Complex Raid, Raidn,

Non Raid Drive Architectures

SLED, JBOD, MAID, SPAN, BIG

Our technicians have a combined 57 years experience in data recovery, raid 0 hard drive data recovery, raid array data reconstruction, raid 0 controllers, Raid 0 server installation and maintenance.

Free Inspection and Examination of all Vestavia Hills raid 0 arrays

No Recovery – No Fee

Flat Rate Pricing

No up charge for Weekend, Evening or Holiday Service

All Internal inspections and repairs of hard drives are conducted in a Class 100 Clean Room Environment.

Vestavia Hills Raid 0 DATA RECOVERY Process starts immediately upon receipt of your drives. We work non stop until the data is recovered.

We are HIPAA Compliant and exceed HIPAA requirements for data security. Each Clients case is assigned to its own recovery hardware and software and all data and forensic images are stored on individual hard drives. No Client Data is stored on Servers or any Internet connected device. Our clients data Security and Confidentiality is of utmost importance.

Most data recovery cases are completed in 24-36 hours of receipt of the drives. This includes Raid 0 Array data recovery cases.

We provide Raid 0 data recovery for the following Alabama cities and towns:

Birmingham, Dothan, Troy, Mobile, Decatur, Auburn, Tuscaloosa, Hoover, Montgomery, Florence, Theodore, Center Point, Enterprise, Mobile, Vestavia Hills, Alabaster, South Birmingham, West Montgomery, Anniston, Bessemer, Homewood, Huntsville, Coy, Gadsden, Graham, Madison, Mountain Brook, Opelika, Phoenix, Prattville, Pritchard, Butler, Alabama, Taladaga, Theodore, Troy, Tuscaloosa, Vestavia Hills

Raid Array configuration RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) is the combining of two or more hard drive working in unison to gain greater levels of performance, redundant reliability, and or to create a larger hard drive volume sizes. In the past this type of configuration was generally used only by large companies. Today, many Vestavia Hills small business and home users are finding an ever increasing need for servers and mass external storage devices to store there ever expanding data needs. When multiple raid configured hard drive arrays fail, special software and hardware is needed to successfully recover your data.

raid 0

Raid 0 Definition: A raid 0 is the equal striping of data across two or more drives without and parity or redundancy. Failure of any one drive in the array will lead to the lose of the array.

Raid arrays are configured in raid levels based on the performance and redundancy that is required for the application. Raid levels vary from hardware arrays and software arrays Raid Levels consist of Standard, Non Standard Raid levels.

Raid Data Reconstruction Recovery from hard drives configured in

Standard Raid Levels

Raid 0, Raid 1, Raid 2, Raid 3, Raid 4, Raid 5, Raid 6

Modified Standard Raid Levels - Nested Raid Levels

Raid 0 + 1 (raid 01), Raid 1 + 0 (raid 10), Raid 3 + 0 (raid 30 or raid 53), Raid 0 +3 (raid 03), Raid 1 +0 + 0 (raid100), Raid 5+ 0 (raid 50), Raid 5 + 1 (raid 51), Raid 0 + 5 (raid 05), raid 6 + 0 (raid 60)

Non Standard Raid Levels

Double Parity, Raid 5e, Raid 5ee, Raid 6e, Raid-DP, Raid1.5, Parity Raid, Matrix Raid, Raid K, Raid S, Raid Z, Beyond Raid, unRaid, Linux MD 10, IBM ServeRaid 1E, ineo Complex Raid, Raidn,

Non Raid Drive Architectures

SLED, JBOD, MAID, SPAN, BIG

We provide raid array data recovery for any raid array utilizing the following formats and file systems:

HFS+, HFSX and HFS Wrapper nix, HP UNIX, FAT16, FAT32, VFAT, NTFS and NTFS5, UFS (all variants), VxFS, HTFS,EAFS, ZIP, Ext2, Ext3 and Reiser FS, XFS, JFS, ZFS

We provide Vestavia Hills, Illinois clients data recovery of any raid 5 array using the following SATA, SAS, IDE or SCSI raid controlers:

3ware Controllers, HP Controllers, IBM Controllers, Adaptec Controllers, NVIDIA controllers, Promise Technology controllers, Acer Controllers, Highpoint controllers, LSI Controllers, Intel Raid Controllers, Sans Controllers, Perc 4, Perc 5, Perc 6, Pec 2, Perc 3 Controllers and any other make raid controller.

We provide SATA, IDE, SAS and IDE raid hard drive data recovery for the following Hdd manufactures: Seagate, Maxtor, Samsung, Western Digital, HGST, Hitachi, Fujitsu, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Sun, NetApp, LSI and more

We provide Vestavia Hills, Illinois clients raid 0 data recovery of any raid array using the following operating systems:



Red Hat, Suse, Caldera, SCO, Debian, Mandrake, Sorcerer, Turbo Linux, Slackware, Gentoo, Apache, Apache OpenOffice, Ubuntu, Fedora, Centos, Arch Linux, Oracle, Zentyal , Open-E, Windows Vista / XP / 2003 / 2000, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Microsoft Windows 10, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2010, Windows server 2012, Windows SBS Server, Windows SBS 2003, Windows SBS 2008, Windows SBS 2010, Windows SBS 2012, Windows NT, Windows Exchange Server, Mac OS, Mac OS X, Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard, Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard, Mac OS X v10.4 Tiger, Mac OS X v10.3 Panther, Mac OS X v10.2 Jaguar, Mac OS 9 , Mac Mavericks, Mac OS Yosemite, Mac El Capitan and earlier MacIntosh and Apple operating systems, SCO Openserver (HTFS & EAFS), SCO Unixware (VxFS & UFS), Solaris Intel (UFS) ,Solaris Sparc (UFS),BSD (UFS1 & UFS2) .HP UNIX (JFS 3.0,3.1,3.3) Open-E or any other proprietary OS.,



What to do if your Raid 0 Array is failing or Failed:

Raid array failure for most Vestavia Hills, Alabama Corporate users is generally a minor several hour inconvenience as they are more likely to have a disaster plan in place to deal with raid array failures. Large corporations generally have the resources to have multiple servers so that ALL their data is not concentrated on one server. They will usually have multiple up to data backups and possibly a backup server ready to go on line.

Having a raid 5 array failure or a single drive failure is a disaster for most Vestavia Hills home users and small to medium size business users. Panic sets in as you see your entire digital life gone or your entire business shut down. What you do next can determine if this disaster turns into a Major Disaster or a Catastrophic Disaster.

Remove the server array from the network and Shut the system down. This includes an active array with just a single drive failure. Do not attempt to rebuild the array unless you have a good backup copy of all your data including the most recent files. Remove all of the drives from the array. Build a new array with new drives and start rebuilding your array from your data backup, even if the backup is old and out of date. If your raid array needs to be recovered you will already have the server and your company up and running. Once the recovered data is back you will simply be updating the array. Even if you have a complete and sound backup of the array, rebuilding using the remaining good drives may result in corrupted data, lost files or failure of other drives in the array. With most businesses, getting the company back up and running and recovering all the data is most important. Buy following the previous steps you have the server up an running in the quickest amount of time and your have the failed array secured so no other damage or data loss can occur.

I know this goes against what most older IT administrations and Techs were taught. We have a combine 57 years experience building, recovery, maintaining and implementing raid arrays on servers, NAS devices, SAN Servers and DAS Servers. This is not how we were taught when it came to recovering a failed raid. Back when, we were limited to the software and hardware that was available to use for bad drives, like CheckDisk, Fsck, Spinrite, all of which are destructive programs. Destructive because they re write data on the hard drive attempting to correct errors in the MFT or Journaling systems or moving data from a bad sector to a good sector sector. With an active failed raid array, with no backup, copying the data or cherry picking the data was the only choice then attempt to add a new drive for the failing array and attempt to rebuild the array for several hours or days. How many arrays have you spent hours on a rebuild, only to have another drive go and the array fail?

Why Not copy the active data from a failing raid 5 array or replace a failed drive and rebuild? The main reason is that when the array was first constructed at the factory or by an IT department, all the drives used in the array were the same make and model drive. All the drives were most likely purchased at the same time from the same location and most probably were all manufactured at the same time and are from the same lot. If one drive from the same lot fails, there is a very high probability that other drives will shortly fail with the same problem. At this point why the drive failed is not of concern. Your only concern at the moment is to protect the integrity of the data on the drives. If you start a rebuild and another drive fails you may corrupt or loose data on the array. The only safe coarse of action is to remove all the drives from the array and have each forensically imaged with forensic hardware and software designed for data recovery and having the ability to deal with bad sectors.

Bad sector failure is the second major concern when attempting to rebuild a failing array. Greater density has been gain on the hard drives by the compression of tracks and sectors to produce greater capacity on the same size platers of 20 years ago. Failing sectors are now more critical then in years past, especially when dealing with multiple drives in a raid array.

Recovering and reconstructing data from a failed raid array:

As with our individual hard drive data recovery, we follow a prescribe methodology for raid array recoveries from Raid Servers, San Servers, NAS Servers, SAN and DAS Servers, Internal and external raid arrays.

1. All mountable drives from the array are Forensically Imaged for data recovery to one of our Enterprise SATA hard drives Our Advanced Forensic Imaging devices have two advantages over other imaging software and hardware. Our Imaging hardware have the fastest data transfer rates available. Our Forensic hardware and software is designed for data recovery and has the ability of reading multiple bad sectors and recovering those sectors to the recovery drive. This leads to a greater data recovery success rate when dealing with bad sector issues .

2. All non mountable drives are examined to determine the best method of rendering the drive mountable for imaging. Logical repairs are handled with our hard drive manufacture specific hard ware and software. All internal examinations or internal repair of the hard drive is conducted in our Class 100 Clean Room Environment. Once the drive is mountable it is forensically imaged to one of our enterprise SATA hard drives,

3. The Imaged drives are than mounted on one of our Raid Recovery workstations, where our engineers will determine the parameters of the raid array, reconstruct and DE-strip the array, at which time the data is recovered to another drive. The recovered data is then copied over to the clients drive for return.

Although we do not promote the use of large volume raid arrays, we will recovery any raid array, no matter the size the drives nor the number of drives used in the array. If you are contemplating constructing a large volume array call and talk to one of our engineers to learn the inherent problems and failure rates of large volume raid arrays. Our goal is the complete recovery your data without causing more loss or corruption to the failed drives. We therefore DO NOT perform data recovery over the Internet nor over a Network. We WILL NOT perform data recovery from a source drive, active Server, Workstation or NAS Device. All of these methods present a high risk of data loss or data corruption.

Advanced Raid Server Data recovery for any Enterprise servers including the following model: Macintosh X Server, HP ProLiant, HP Integrity Superdome, HP AlphaServer DS25, HP AlphaServer DS15A, Sun Netra, Sun SPARC Enterprise, IBM x86 enterprise servers, Dell™ PowerEdge™ T110, Xenos Enterprise Server, Raid Inc Xanadu™, Silicon Mechanics Storform nServ, Silicon Mechanics Rackform iServ, Intel® Storage Server. For More Information on our Server data recovery click on the Server button

We provide Raid 5 Server Data Recovery for all NAS, SAN and DAS Server makes and models. I addition to Raid Array data recovery for Raid Servers, we also provide SATA, SAS, NL-SAS, SCSI, IDE RAID DATA RECOVERY for all makes and models of NAS Raid servers, SAN Servers , DAS Server and External and Internal Raid Arrays. For More Information on our NAS SAN DAS Server data recovery click on the Server button Generally most raid array recoveries are completed within 24 hours of receipt of the drives. We also provide data recovery for all Alabama zip code areas.





We also provide Alabama raid 0 data recovery services for the following cities:

Birmingham, Dothan, Troy, Mobile, Decatur, Auburn, Tuscaloosa, Hoover, Montgomery, Florence, Theodore, Center Point, Enterprise, Mobile, Vestavia Hills, Alabaster, South Birmingham, West Montgomery, Anniston, Bessemer, Homewood, Huntsville, Coy, Gadsden, Graham, Madison, Mountain Brook, Opelika, Phoenix, Prattville, Pritchard, Butler, Alabama, Taladaga, Theodore, Troy, Tuscaloosa, Vestavia Hills




SAN Server Data Recovery - DAS server Data Recovery - SAN Raid Array - DAS Raid Array US Data Recovery provides data recovery for all SAN (Serial Area Network) devices and DAS ( Direct Attached Storage) appliances. DAS devices are stand alone file storage units connected to a single Server, workstation, etc. SAN Devices are stand alone storage units connected to a network via a fiber cable, ISCSI, etc.. Both SAN and DAS appliances will have their own filing journaling and filing systems and custom offsets prescribed by each different manufacture. SAN and DAS servers are usually configure in a raid 5, 0, 10, 6 or raid 1. As with any raid array, we strongly suggest that data stored on a single SAN or DAS appliance, be backed up to another device. Our SAN and DAS recovery engineers are fully versed in the many different SAN/DAS system configurations.

We also Offer San forensic data recovery and forensic data imaging for large Corporations, Law Firms, Universities, Military, Police Departments, Home Land Security and other Government entities. We provide eDiscovery for electronic data storage devices used for civil and criminal litigation. All forensic image integrity is certified with MD5, SHA1 and SHA256 hashes. We have 23 years prior Criminal investigative experience in Federal and local law in Washington, D.C.

SAN Server raid data recovery and raid data reconstruction follows the same prescribed procedures as recovering a standard raid server. The major difference is the proprietary Operating systems, journaling and filing systems and custom offsets used by each different manufacture. Our raid recovery engineers are fully versed in the many different SAN system configurations. Our raid data recovery specialist have recovered raid arrays from most SAN Servers including: QNap SAN, Sans Digital SAN, Drobo SAN, Open E SAN Servers, ISCISI San Servers, DS Dapron SAN, Raid, Inc SAN, Spectron SAN Servers, Bright Drive SAN, HP SAN, IBM SAN, Snap SAN, D-Link SAN, Fluke SAN Server, EMC SAN, NetWitness SAN, THecus SAN, Silicon Mechanics SAN, Dell SAN Servers, Arecanas SAN, Sgi Infinite Storarge, THecus SAN, Iomega SAN Servers, Sans Digital SAN, LaCie SAN, LaCie 8big Rack Thunderbolt, Linksys SAN, D-Link Servers, Qnap, SAN Servers, Micronet San, Netgear San Server, NetApp San Server, Open_E SAN, Supermicro SAN, SGI SAN, CineRaid SAN, iStarUSA Server, Chenbro San Server and more.

The San and DAS devices are generally used for storage of large amounts of data and high speed data transfer. SAN and DAS Devices are usually configured in 1 or more Raid Arrays using enterprise SATA, SAS or SCSI Drives. We provide raid data recovery for all SAN Raid 1, SAN Raid 0, SAN Raid 5, SAN Raid 6, SAN Raid 10, SAN Raid 05, San Raid 50, SAN Raid 01 and other Hybrid SAN arrays and any other SAN Raid array configuration. We provide San Data Recovery for all makes and models of SATA Drives, SAS Drives, We also provide SAN Raid Data Recovery for all makes and models of SAN Servers Including: Qnap, Sans Digital, Drobo SAN, Open E, ISCSI SAN, DS Dapron, Raid, Inc, Spectron, BrightDrive, Drobo San, HP LeftHand SAN, IBM San, Snap SAN, D-Link, Fluke Network, EMC Cluster, NetWitness SNC, Thecus SAN Server, Silicon Mechanics, THecus SAN, Silicon Mechanics SAN, Dell SAN Servers, Arecanas SAN, Sgi Infinite Storarge, THecus SAN, Iomega SAN Servers, Sans Digital SAN, LaCie SAN, Linksys SAN, D-Link SCSI Drives. Servers, Qnap, SAN Servers, Micronet San, Netgear San Server, NetApp San Server, Open_E SAN, Super Micro SAN, SGI SAN, CineRaid SAN and all other makes of SAN Servers.

We provide Raid Server Data Recovery for all SAN and DAS Server makes and models. Generally most raid array recoveries are completed within 24 hours of receipt of the drives. As with our individual hard drive data recovery, we follow a prescribe methodology for raid array recoveries from Raid Servers, San Servers, NAS Devices, DAS servers, Internal and external raid arrays. Each Drive is examined to determine any problem with that drive. If a logical or hardware issue is discovered it is corrected so as to make the drive mountable. Each mountable drive is than Forensically imaged to one of our Enterprise SATA drives. Our Advanced Forensic Imaging devices have two advantages over other imaging software and hardware. Our Imagers have the fastest data transfer rates available. Our Forensic hardware and software has the ability of reading multiple bad sectors and recovering those sectors to the recovery drive. This leads to a greater data recovery success rate when dealing with bad sector issues. The Imaged drives are than mounted on one of our Raid Recovery workstations, where our engineers will determine the parameters of the raid array, reconstruct and de-strip the array, which is then copied to another drive. Although we do not promote the use of large volume raid arrays, we will recovery any raid array, no matter the size the drives nor the number of drives used in the array. If you are contemplating constructing a large volume array call and talk to one of our engineers to learn the inherent problems and failure rates of large volume raid arrays. Our goal is the complete recovery your data without causing more loss or corruption to the failed drives. We therefore DO NOT perform data recovery over the Internet nor over a active Network. We WILL NOT perform data recovery from a source drive, active Server, Workstation or SAN/DAS Device. All of these methods present a high risk of data loss or data corruption. For more information concerning recovery from Raid Servers, SAN Servers, DAS servers, NAS Devices, Internal raid arrays or external raid arrays call and speak to one of our raid recovery engineers.

We also provide SAN Raid Data Recovery for all makes and models of SAN Servers Including:
Qnap, Sans Digital, Drobo SAN, Open E, ISCSI SAN, DS Dapron, Raid, Inc, Spectron, BrightDrive, Drobo San, HP LeftHand SAN, IBM San, Snap SAN, D-Link, Fluke Network, EMC Cluster, NetWitness SNC, Thecus SAN Server, Silicon Mechanics and all other makes of SAN Servers. Thecus SAN, Silicon Mechanics SAN, Dell SAN Servers, Arecanas SAN, Sgi Infinite Storarge, THecus SAN, Iomega SAN Servers, Sans Digital SAN, LaCie SAN, Linksys SAN, D-Link Servers, Qnap, SAN Servers, Micronet San, Netgear San Server, NetApp San Server, Open_E SAN, SuperMicro SAN, SGI SAN, CineRaid SAN , LenovoEMC NAS, Lenovo ix4 NAS, Seagate Business Storage Norco and more. We Provide Dell Raid Array data recovery for all Dell Servers including Dell EqualLogic PS Series and FS Series, PowerEdge Blade Servers, PowerEdge Tower Servers, PowerEdge Rackmount Servers, PowerVault NAS Servers, PowerVault SAN, HP StorFabric SAN HDS SAN Servers, ChenBro Server and more

Raid Array Issues - Raid Array Recoveries

Raid array failure for most corporate users is generally a minor several hour inconvenience as they are more likely to have a disaster plan in place to deal with raid array failures. Large corporations generally have the resources to have multiple servers so that ALL their data is not concentrated on one server. They will usually have multiple up to data backups and possibly a backup server ready to go on line.

Having a raid array failure or a single drive failure is a disaster for most home users and small to medium size business users. Panic sets in as you see your entire digital life gone or your entire business shut down. What you do next can determine if this disaster turns into a Major Disaster or a Catastrophic Disaster.

Remove the server array from the network and Shut the system down. This includes an active array with just a single drive failure. Do not attempt to rebuild the array unless you have a good backup copy of all your data including the most recent files. Remove all of the drives from the array. Build a new array with new drives and start rebuilding your array from your data backup, even if the backup is old and out of date. If your raid array needs to be recovered you will already have the server and your company up and running. Once the recovered data is back you will simply be updating the array. Even if you have a complete and sound backup of the array, rebuilding using the remaining good drives may result in corrupted data, lost files or failure of other drives in the array. With most businesses, getting the company back up and running and recovering all the data is most important. Buy following the previous steps you have the server up an running in the quickest amount of time and you have the failed array secured so no other damage or data loss can occur.

I know this goes against what older IT administrations and Techs were taught. We have a combine 57 years experience building, recovery, maintaining and implementing raid arrays on servers, NAS devices, SAN Servers and DAS Servers. This is not how we were taught when it came to recovering a failed raid. Back when, we were limited to the software and hardware that was available to use for bad drives, like CheckDisk, Fsck, Spinrite, all of which are destructive programs. Destructive because they re write data on the hard drive attempting to correct errors in the MTF or Journaling systems or moving data from a bad sector to a good sector sector. With an active failed raid array, with no backup, copying the data or cherry picking the data was the only choice then attempt to add a new drive for the failing array and attempt to rebuild the array for several hours or days. How many arrays have you spent hours on a rebuild, only to have another drive go and the array fail?

Why Not copy the active data from a failing raid array or replace a failed drive and rebuild? The main reason is that when the array was first constructed at the factory or by an IT department, all the drives used in the array were the same make and model drive. All the drives were most likely purchased at the same time from the same location and most probably were all manufactured at the same time and are from the same lot. If one drive from the same lot fails, there is a very high probability that other drives will shortly fail with the same problem. At this point why the drive failed is not of concern. Your only concern at the moment is to protect the integrity of the data on the drives. If you start a rebuild and another drive fails you may corrupt or loose data on the array. The only safe course of action is to remove all the drives from the array and have each forensically imaged with forensic hardware and software designed for data recovery and having the ability to deal with bad sectors.

Bad sector failure is the second major concern when attempting to rebuild a failing array. Greater density has been gain on the hard drives by the compression of tracks and sectors to produce greater capacity on the same size platters of 20 years ago. Failing sectors are now more critical then in years past, especially when dealing with multiple drives in a raid array.

Recovering and reconstructing data from a failed raid array:

As with our individual hard drive data recovery, we follow a prescribe methodology for raid array recoveries from Raid Servers, San Servers, NAS Servers, SAN and DAS Servers, Internal and external raid arrays.

Although we do not promote the use of large volume raid arrays, we will recovery any raid array, no matter the size the drives nor the number of drives used in the array. If you are contemplating constructing a large volume array call and talk to one of our engineers to learn the inherent problems and failure rates of large volume raid arrays. Our goal is the complete recovery your data without causing more loss or corruption to the failed drives. We therefore DO NOT perform data recovery over the Internet nor over a Network. We WILL NOT perform data recovery from a source drive, active Server, Workstation or NAS Device. All of these methods present a high risk of data loss or data corruption.

For the latest Storage Recovery information Connect with us at Google+ (us-Data Recovery) – Twitter @USDataRecovery on Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/pin/75576099980819923/ Google AdWords

………………………….. 1. All mountable drives from the array are Forensically Imaged for data recovery to one of our Enterprise SATA hard drives. Our Advanced Forensic Imaging devices have two advantages over other imaging software and hardware. Our Imaging hardware has the fastest data transfer rates available. Our Forensic hardware and software is designed for data recovery and has the ability of reading multiple bad sectors and recovering those sectors to the recovery drive. This leads to a greater data recovery success rate when dealing with bad sector issues.

2. All non mountable drives are examined to determine the best method of rendering the drive mountable for imaging. Logical repairs are handled with our hard drive manufacture specific hard ware and software. All internal examinations or internal repair of the hard drive is conducted in our Class 100 Clean Room Environment. Once the drive is mountable it is forensically imaged to one of our enterprise SATA hard drives,

3. The Imaged drives are than mounted on one of our Raid Recovery workstations, where our engineers will determine the parameters of the raid array reconstruct and DE-strip the array, at which time the data is recovered to another drive. The recovered data is then copied over to the clients drive for return.

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US Data Recovery Provides data recovery for iPhones, Ipads, iPad touch, Android Smartphones and Android tablets. We also provide data recovery for jailbreak phones. We can recover your contacts,photos, call history, messages, calendar, notes, voice mail , voice messages and more from working or dead phones. Attempting to recover data from dead or submerge phones can cause permanent loss to your data. Continued use of your phone can cause permanent loss or damage to your deleted data. Call our Techs (with another phone ) if your are in need of recovering your phones data.We recovery data from from iPhone 6 Plus/6//5S/5C/5/4S/4/3GS/3G, all iPads and iPod touch 5/4.



US Data Recovery provides Macintosh Apple data recovery for Corporate, Business and Home User clients. Our Mac Apple Data Recovery includes recovery of data from failed Macintosh raid arrays, Macintosh servers, Macintosh hard drives, Macintosh external drives, NAS DAS San devices and flash drives. We provide Data recovery for all the following Mac Apple products: iMac. MacBook, MacBook Pro, MackBook Air, Mac Mini, iPad , iPhone and G Technology external drives.

We Provide Hard Drive Data Recovery and Raid array data recovery for all Dell Laptops, Desktops, Servers, San Server, DAS severs utilizing Western Digital Hard Drive models : Wd Red, WD, Black, WD Blue, WD Green, WD RE, WD SE, WD XE, WD Raptor, Seagate Hard Drive models: 7200, 7200,07, 7200,08, 7200,09, 7200,10, 7200,11, 7200,12, Constellation, TeraScale, Momentus, Barracuda, Samsung /Seagate, Maxtor/Seagate. Samsung Spinpoint, Hitachi DeskStar, Travel Star, Ultra Star, Toshiba 3.5 , Toshiba 2.5, Fujitsu 7200, Fujitsu 7200, Lenovo ThinkPad, Lenovo SAS, NetApp SATA, NetApp SAS, Lsi 3.5 SATA, LSI 3.5 SAS internal







.We also provide data recovery for all Alabama zip code areas.

Vestavia Hills Data Recovery Links for :

Birmingham, Dothan, Troy, Mobile, Decatur, Auburn, Tuscaloosa, Hoover, Montgomery, Florence, Theodore, Center Point, Enterprise, Mobile, Vestavia Hills, Alabaster, South Birmingham, West Montgomery, Anniston, Bessemer, Homewood, Huntsville, Coy, Gadsden, Graham, Madison, Mountain Brook, Opelika, Phoenix, Prattville, Pritchard, Butler, Alabama, Taladaga, Theodore, Troy, Tuscaloosa, Vestavia Hills

Raid 0 data recovery Vestavia Hills - Raid 1 data Recovery Vestavia Hills - Raid 5 data recovery Vestavia Hills - Raid 10 data recovery Vestavia Hills

Us Data Recovery provides raid 0 data recovery for Vestavia Hills, Alabama Corporate, Business and Home User clients. Vestavia Hills Raid 0 Data Recovery includes recovery of data from failed raid 0 arrays, servers, hard drives, external drives, NAS DAS San devices and flash drives.

Us Data Recovery provides Raid 0 data links for Vestavia Hills, Alabama Corporate, Business and Home User clients. Vestavia Hills Data links includes recovery of data from failed raid arrays, servers, hard drives, external drives, NAS DAS San devices, flash drives and other data recovery links.


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