When you’re dealing with a mechanical device, failure is inevitable. It’s a matter of when it will fail, not if. And when will be at the most inopportune moment.

In the case of a hard drive packed with your images, failure without a backup is disastrous. The Drobo I used to store all of my old images went belly up. And it went with little or no warning. Fortunately I had a backup. I was looking for a specific image and noticed several images in the folder were corrupt. I looked in other folders and noticed lots of corrupt files.  Apparently the Drobo had been in its death throes for some time. And my system was running bog slow, a nasty side effect of the dying Drobo. Then it just stopped.

Due to the fact that the Drobo uses a proprietary system for redundancy, the only recourse would have been to buy another Drobo to read the disks, which were probably all corrupt. Due to the cost of a new Drobo, that was not an option. But I had enough in reserve to buy a 5 TB LaCie external drive. And fortunately, I had backups of every folder on the drive, and I had all my Lightroom catalogs stored on another drive as well. So recovery without losing any of my precious images was possible.

The first thing I did was copy the backed-up images to the new drive. In Lightroom, I loaded the catalog for each year. Of course Lightroom could not find the photos because the Drobo was no longer connected to the system. Missing_FolderBut the folder structure of the backed-up drive was identical to what was on the Drobo. All I needed to do was select the root folder on the Drobo, and show Lightroom where it currently resided. In a few seconds, Lightroom knew where all the images were and the restoration was complete.