A week ago I stupidly split a small quantity of milk on my laptop's keyboard.
I followed common sense and now the laptop works... except the hard disk.
Booting a Live-CD works, but the hard disk is not shown.
Even if I plug the hard-disk into a hard-disk-to-USB device, it won't start spinning.
Could milk enter the hard disk, while leaving the rest of the laptop intact?
Would you suggest hiring a professional to get back the content of the disk (a few months' pictures, not the end of the world) ?
Answer
There is no chance of milk getting into the disk itself. I'm not sure what the electrostatic properties of milk are but there might be a small chance of of a short occurring and perhaps frying some element of the disk (via data or power connectors), or possibly via the on-disk chipset if you have on that is exposed..
It's unusual that you can't get the disk to spin. Disks tend to keep spinning long after the become faulty for other reason.
It could be a coincidence, simply that it failed at the same time as the accident, or perhaps in your eagerness to clean the mess, the drive received a fatal jolt.
Check all the contacts and jumpers - make sure they are clean. Did the disk get well-covered? It should be apparent how expose it was...
As for recovery, there is a possibility that a professional disk recovery service will be able to help, but they are very expensive. You can do worse than enquire directly to them (e.g. On-Track)
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