Q:

Hard Drive Clicking Noise – Can Data Be Recovered?

A clicking hard drive often indicates mechanical failure, such as damaged read/write heads or spindle issues. This thread discusses what the clicking noise means, immediate precautions to prevent further damage, and whether data can still be recovered using software or professional recovery services.

  • This topic was modified 5 hours, 45 minutes ago by Kael Rowan.
Windows data recovery

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thanks for your suggestions, will act upon it.

I had a similar issue with my Seagate drive last year. It clicked for two days before completely dying. I was able to recover most of my documents while it was still being detected intermittently using recovery software, so act quickly

If the drive remains readable for short periods, you can try using a data recovery tool like Stellar Data Recovery to scan and extract important files while it’s still detectable. Start with the most critical files first.

  • This reply was modified 5 hours, 29 minutes ago by deken.
  • This reply was modified 5 hours, 27 minutes ago by deken.

A clicking sound usually points to a mechanical issue inside the drive—often the read/write head or spindle motor. The most important thing is to <strong data-start=”1048″ data-end=”1084″>stop using the drive immediately, because continued power cycles can worsen the damage.

My external hard drive also started making a clicking noise today and now it’s not opening properly. It still shows up sometimes but disconnects after a few seconds. Can the data still be recovered?

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