- An old, corrupted hard drive that I scanned for evidence of "bitcoi*" and "walle*". It let me read maybe 1/5 of the drive before there was a hardware failure. I dumped the contents of that 1/5 onto my computer, and scanned the image for those words, and no hits on "walle*" but there is evidence of "Bitcoin Project" on the drive. He says the drive hasn't been touched since ~2012 or thereabouts, when it was damaged.
In such cases, you should seek out help from a professional data recovery company and don't try manually because as you said, then hardware failure occurred. Btw I think that Mushai is right, your friend would purchase Bitcoin from Mt Gox exchange. I think he wouldn't have set up Bitcoin Core wallet because it's a little complicated and he would have remembered that.
Two further questions:
- If he made a web wallet or bought from an exchange back then, which were operational in that time frame (late 2010-mid 2011)? So I could look them up and see if any of his emails still work on these sites, or that key works.
- We're looking for more old hard drives he might have. If I scan the disk images, what text or characters can I scan for that would give me an indication that a wallet or keys are on any of these drives? Somebody on here said look for "name" as it is a field in the wallet.dat, but that is too common a word and shows up alot in a typical Windows installation. I only have a newer wallet.dat created by newer Bitcoin Core for comparison and the "name" field usually looks like this: name*bc1... In 2010/2011, what would it have looked like?
What do you mean in web wallet? Wallet like blockchain.info? It was created in 2011 as a blockchain explorer and wallet was created in 2012. If I recall correctly, there wasn't similar Bitcoin wallet before.
If you mean wallet generator websites in web wallet, then it's possible that he used one but I think recovery will be impossible and also these types of websites were actually scammers.