

JP Gleyzes has updated the project titled Rezodo: Long Range irrigation and weather station.Flatus O'Flaherty has added details to Orchard Pest Protection + LoRa darkStar. brtv-z has updated details to Heating pad, charger, speaker from credit card.brtv-z has updated the project titled Heating pad, charger, speaker from credit card.goblin-dev has updated details to G-EDM.Tomas Green wrote a comment on project log Concept and History.Reggie on Convert Temperatures The Analog Way.Ostracus on A Wall Mounted Newspaper That’s Extra.Janw on Tech In Plain Sight: Field Guide To Power Plugs.Dude on NASA’s Ingenuity Mars Helicopter Completes 50th Flight.Ian on Hacking Bing Chat With Hash Tag Commands.Cogidubnus Rex on New Renewable Energy Projects Are Overwhelming US Grids.AKA the A on Circumvent Facial Recognition With Yarn.robomonkey on New Renewable Energy Projects Are Overwhelming US Grids.David on A Wall Mounted Newspaper That’s Extra.Retro Gadgets: The 1983 Pocket Oscilloscope 26 Comments Posted in Repair Hacks, Slider Tagged dead bug soldering, flash memory, Micro Sd Card, NAND flash, Nand Revovery, sd card, SD Recovery Post navigation Hopefully we’ll never need to do SD card recovery! We will likely give this process a try just to play round with the concept. If you ever find yourself in need of an SD card recovery tool you could always roll your own DIY NAND reader. Of course you’re still going to need to make sense out of the NAND dump. Then solder your enameled wire onto the small solder pads to hook it up to a NAND reader and you should be able to read the data that was previously unreachable via conventional means. Working your way down from a relatively high grit sand paper, slowly sand away the plastic on the underside of the SD card until you can clearly see the copper traces hidden away inside. With a bit of know how - along with sandpaper, enameled wire, and a NAND reader - an image of your lost data can be recovered with a bit of patience and some good soldering skills. As long as they are not a dead short between the two the SD card controller isn’t completely trashed and we can go ahead and get into that little sucker. On a Micro SD card you may have noticed there are two slightly longer pins than the rest. shows us a process to directly access the NAND memory of a faulty micro SD card to recover those precious files you thought about backing up but never got around to. You may still have some luck getting those selfies off of your SD card, even if it will no longer mount on your computer.
