Hello everybody,
I’m trying to read a (probably damaged) microSD card from my computer (tried with two different computers, both Arch Linux, which can read other card without any problems).
There isn’t any singal of life (no /dev/sdX
, nothing with GParted, testdisk, …); the only thing that I found was in dmesg
.
Here’s the output of sudo dmesg | rg "mmc0"
:
Any idea on how to resolve?
Your output from dmesg didn’t paste.
Does the card appear in lsblk
? Also try cleaning any dirt off the microSD
Sorry, this is the output:
[ 8306.605559] mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch [ 8306.901332] mmc0: error -110 whilst initialising SD card [ 8307.544364] mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch [ 8307.837385] mmc0: error -110 whilst initialising SD card [ 8308.488564] mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch [ 8308.789314] mmc0: error -110 whilst initialising SD card [ 8582.217859] mmc0: error -123 whilst initialising SD card [ 8584.685053] mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch [ 8584.982799] mmc0: error -110 whilst initialising SD card [ 8585.628028] mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch [ 8585.926901] mmc0: error -110 whilst initialising SD card [ 8586.573009] mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch [ 8586.870849] mmc0: error -110 whilst initialising SD card
The reader can’t initalizie the SD card, so no “/dev/sdb” (nothing on lsblk also, obvioulsy).
I’ll try cleaning it better, but I already used a napkin.
mmc0: cannot verify signal voltage switch
suggests something is wrong with the hardware (either SD card or card reader). -110
is a timeout error, and -123
generally indicates a problem with media hardware.
You’re not gonna fix this with software. Try a different card reader, or if you think it’s the SD card, put a bit of alcohol on a cotton swab and gently clean the contacts. Let the card fully dry, then try again.
Obviously this is a hail-merry shot, but your card is likely physically done for
I’ll try cleaning it with alcol. Is it a good idea to use pressurized air?
If you need the data, a solid state recovery specialist may be able to assist you. Surely won’t be cheap as it generally requires reading directly from the flash through soldered wires or jigs.
just in case, you tried on two computers, but is it the same card reader ? I’ve seen more dead microSD to usb/sd readers than sd cards in my life
Try putting it in the freezer for a few minutes before trying to read the data. Or heat it up slightly.
This is an old trick I’ve used to recover data from a hard drive or two. I suppose it could help if the problem with the SD is some kind of microscopic fractures.
It should be emphasized that this is just a temporary workaround at best.
If you just want to try to recover, PhotoRec This does require it to at least be able to power and have a raw device to look at, though it doesn’t have to be able to be mounted. More than just photos can be recovered.
Had pretty close to the same results with PhotoRec vs commercial tools on windows.