
Common SSD Problems and Safe Data Recovery
SSD problems like controller failure, NAND bad blocks, and firmware corruption can cause sudden data loss. PCPrompt Data recovery ensures safe repair, accurate diagnosis, and secure extraction of files without causing further damage. With advanced tools, experts restore access even when the SSD is not detected, unreadable, or stuck in read-only mode.
Emergency and Damaged SSD Recovery
For urgent cases where time is critical, we offer Emergency SSD Data Recovery — available 24×7. Depending on the issue, we can often deliver results within 24–72 hours.
Controller Failure
Controller failure makes SSDs disappear, freeze, or show wrong size; expert tools recover lost data.
Bad NAND Block
NAND wear or bad blocks slow SSDs, cause crashes, and lead to read-only mode; skilled recovery helps.
Firmware Problem
Firmware or mapping table corruption makes SSD data vanish and prevents access, expert recovery data.
FAQ’s
We provide professional data recovery for hard drives, SSDs, RAID servers, laptops, desktops, memory cards, USB drives, and external storage devices. Our technicians handle both logical and physical failures using advanced recovery tools.
Yes, data can often be recovered from crashed or dead hard drives. Specialized equipment and techniques are used to repair internal damage, access the disk safely, and retrieve important files.
Yes, we follow a transparent “no data, no charge” policy. Customers only pay after successful recovery, ensuring trust and confidence in the recovery process.
Yes, deleted or formatted data can often be recovered if it has not been overwritten. Data recovery specialists use advanced scanning tools to locate lost file structures and restore them from the storage device.
Professional data recovery is safe when performed by experienced technicians. Reputable companies use read-only methods and specialized tools to avoid further damage, ensuring your original data remains intact during the recovery process.
Data recovery time depends on the type of problem, storage device, and amount of data. Simple logical recoveries may take a few hours, while complex cases like RAID or physically damaged drives can take several days.

