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View Full Version : Any Mac IT guys or gals here? Help!



Blatman
4th May 2009, 13:32
Daughter's friend spilled wine on her iBook G4 which is now dead. Probably shorted the motherboard I guess. Is there anyone here (in Auck) who could extract the data off the hardrive?? It's needed urgently for uni.
I suppose it will be cheaper to buy a secondhand G4 and sell the dead one on Trademe, but if there's someone here who could do the repair as well (and not charge a fortune) that would be cool.
Cheers!

Drunken Monkey
4th May 2009, 13:35
If it's just the data you want off the hard drive, anyone should be able to do it. You don't need a mac specialist. If you have trouble finding someone, our data forensics guy can do it, but we normally charge at least $300 for the service, so I wouldn't recommend us for a home job. If you're desperate though, drop me a pm, we can do a same day turn around if you give us enough notice.

Blatman
4th May 2009, 13:40
If it's just the data you want off the hard drive, anyone should be able to do it. You don't need a mac specialist. If you have trouble finding someone, our data forensics guy can do it, but we normally charge at least $300 for the service, so I wouldn't recommend us for a home job. If you're desperate though, drop me a pm, we can do a same day turn around if you give us enough notice.

Thanks, yeah $300 probably out of her budget (spent it all on wine..grrrrrr) but nice to know if we get stuck, cheers

Big Dave
4th May 2009, 13:44
I would swap the drive into a different machine to see if it is still viable.

Ezra (that's his name) at Logical systems is a good mac hardware man.

http://www.logicalsystems.co.nz/

Blatman
4th May 2009, 13:44
Hey Drunken Monkey - if we bought a secondhand G4 can we just swap harddrives, or is it not that simple?

Blatman
4th May 2009, 13:45
Thanks Dave, I'll google him

Big Dave
4th May 2009, 13:48
Thanks Dave, I'll google him

Forgot to put the link - there now.

xwhatsit
4th May 2009, 13:48
Hey Drunken Monkey - if we bought a secondhand G4 can we just swap harddrives, or is it not that simple?
Well you could do that. But the hard drive is a standard laptop drive anyway; it'll fit into any computer, even a Windows/Linux laptop.

If it were a desktop, you'd just take the drive out and stick it into any old other desktop and copy the data across. Only thing is, laptops only room to plug in one drive at a time. So you want to buy a $20 external 2.5" USB drive enclosure from tardme and plug the drive into that. Then you can access the data from any computer.

Squiggles
4th May 2009, 13:48
I can remove the hd and put it one one of our externals to transfer the stuff across... Its not a big job to have done but can be quite time consuming (there are alot of shields to remove). Have had to do more of these jobs @ work recently as the ibook fleet ages :(

Blatman
4th May 2009, 13:54
Dave, I talked to Ezra. He seems pretty on to it. He agreed the best thing is to buy secondhand and swap drives. His charge about $150 so that sounds pretty resonable. Thanks to you other guys too! I could do it myself if it was a desktop, but frickin' laptops.....

Squiggles
4th May 2009, 14:02
Dave, I talked to Ezra. He seems pretty on to it. He agreed the best thing is to buy secondhand and swap drives. His charge about $150 so that sounds pretty resonable. Thanks to you other guys too! I could do it myself if it was a desktop, but frickin' laptops.....

Id just chuck the old drive in an enclosure and use the migration tool to bring all the stuff over...
If he's going to open up the secondhand lappy you might as well have a new drive put in, the old one is at least 3 years old now
Ther guides i've used in the past are here: http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Repair/iBook-G4-14-Inch-933-MHz-1-33-GHz-Hard-Drive-Replacement/189/1

Blatman
4th May 2009, 14:05
Cool, good info - I appreciate it, cheers!

driftn
4th May 2009, 14:11
Take it to magnum mac in newmarket they will be able to sort it for you.

RantyDave
4th May 2009, 15:27
Then you can access the data from any computer.
Provided it speaks hfs+ you mean. So, a mac, in other words.

Dave

CookMySock
4th May 2009, 16:02
Id just chuck the old drive in an enclosure and use the migration tool to bring all the stuff over... Yus.


Provided it speaks hfs+ you mean. So, a mac, in other words.And most of the unixes.

Steve

Drunken Monkey
4th May 2009, 16:18
I'd probably do what squiggles suggested in your case. Hard drives do have a breather hole (well technically a pressure valve outlet IIRC), but it's on the underside and it's highly unlikely that it's damaged (most likely there's been a short on the mainboard) and should be fine to move to an external cage or whatever.

riffer
4th May 2009, 19:14
Provided it speaks hfs+ you mean. So, a mac, in other words.

Dave


Not so fast Dave.

Macdrive is available on the torrents, and lets you read and write to HFS+ drives on a Windows system.

A handy bit of kit to have is a USB cable which has IDE 3.5", IDE 2.5" and SATA on a block on the end. Match that with a power supply with a Molex plug and you're away. That's how I deal with drives that need to be played with.

If you were down here I could sort you out easily.

xwhatsit
4th May 2009, 22:32
Provided it speaks hfs+ you mean. So, a mac, in other words.

Dave

And most of the unixes.
Like they say, all the three main platforms speak HFS+ these days. HFS is a little easier to get to, but it's still possible to deal with HFS+.