We recently went through a hurricane and our server room became flooded. Hooray for insurance. Anyway, I need to save as much data off one of the hard drives as possible. Yes, it was submerged for the better part of two days.
Do I need to open the drive and make sure it's flood-water free? Should I remove the board on bottom and dry out the foam? What all do I need.
Any suggestions would be helpful.
Thanks in advance!
http://www.storagesearch.com/disklabs-art3-floods.html
If you need as much as possible, take it to a specialist.
The inside needs to be free of water and debris (even dust). It might need to be opened in order to dry out the platters. If that's the case, you shouldn't be doing it. Drives need to be opened inside a cleanroom. Dust on the platters is very bad news.
If you don't have the budget for a real data recovery solution, that's fine. Understand that anything you do may limit or destroy the chances of a professional being able to get data off of the drive. If you're willing to take that chance then go ahead and replace the circuit board with a new one off a drive of the same make and model. While you're replacing it, make sure everything is dried off. Say a little prayer, plug it in, and see what it comes up with.
Putting the hard drive in an airtight container with uncooked rice should help to absorb the moisture.
Edit: further enlightenment suggest this could be risky because of the residue left by contaminants in the water. Therefore, there are a few options:
On top of the preservation-advice by Josh, do keep in mind data recovery companies will usually charge per file/byte and time spent.
If you can clearly map out what files you absolutely need and how the disks were structured (raid, filesystems, ..) you can keep the costs down.
Squeeze everything you can out of your backups and see what data can be easily reconstructed. Consult with the business people to see how much what specific data is worth, they may have a very different perspective than us technical people. (also: get any "don't need this data" in writing!)