Arin 0 Posted September 6, 2005 My HD crashed. I plugged it into another computer and it showed up as an uninitialized drive. So I got a copy of R-studio Demo which was able to identify that the drive was once 2 partitions and it showed all my data. I got a copy of R-studio NTFS and am now backing up all my lost data. But, it still shows the file systems and partitions I had on the drive. Is there any software out there that can correct the HD so it knows this information again so I can just simply plug it back into my computer and use it again? This drive had my OS and several of my files on it. I would like to use it untill I get my new HD in the mail. Thanks! Share this post Link to post
jmmijo 1 Posted September 6, 2005 It's possible that you could manually repair the partition table but I'm skeptical this will work in the manner you want it too I did a GOOGLE search and found these listed that may help you out. My suggestion is to recover as much as R-Studio will recover and then run the HD manufacturers diagnostics on that drive to rule out any media/hardware defects. This will involve destructive testing so it's best to recover first then run these tests. Share this post Link to post
AndyFair 0 Posted September 6, 2005 I agree - even if you could repair the partitions, I still woudn't trust them - best to recover what information you can, copy it to another hard drive, then start again with the fubar'ed drive. Share this post Link to post
fpin 0 Posted September 8, 2005 This partition software can. Just select "Recover partitions" option. It will completely recover all deleted partitions so that you could work as if nothing happened. Share this post Link to post
yutao 0 Posted September 12, 2005 I suggest you use Partition Table Doctor to resolve your problem.The software provides very useful functions: Backup partition table, Restore partition table, Rebuild partition table, undelete partition, Fix boot sector, rebuild mbr,etc. First thing I recommend you download the demo version of Partition Table Doctor.( http://www.ptdd.com/download.htm ) Run the program and select "Rebuild Partition Table", then choose "Interactive" mode. See more: http://www.ptdd.com/recoverylostpartition.htm http://www.ptdd.com/recoverdeletedpartition.htm http://www.ptdd.com/partition-recovery.htm http://www.ptdd.com Share this post Link to post
yutao 0 Posted October 9, 2005 I recommend that you use DataRecoveryWizard to recover your data. The software provides very useful functions for data recovery: DeleteRecovery, FormatRecovery, AdvancedRecovery, RawRecovery. This program is an efficient disk recovery software providing you a complete answer to data loss. You can download the demo version of DataRecoveryWizard. http://www.[censored].com/download.htm Run the program and you can select the any recovery mode "DeletedRecovery", "FormatRecovery" and "AdvancedRecovery". See more: http://www.[censored].com http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-deleted-files.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-lost-partition.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-formatted-partition.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-fdisked-drives.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-lost-files.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-repartitioned-drives.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-scandisk-chkdsk-disk.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-ghosted-image-data.htm http://www.[censored].com/datarecoverywizard/recover-encrypted-data.htm Share this post Link to post
kmzpub 0 Posted November 8, 2005 Active@ partition recovery once helped me in such a situation, when I lost partitions. You can see if it can help you. http://www.partition-recovery.com/ Share this post Link to post
Christianb 8 Posted November 9, 2005 Hi Arin, There an awful lot of replies there, but I'm afraid aside from tool recommendations nobody warned you about the likelihood of wrecking what little data you have left. You have yet to explain or in fact don't know what caused your partition failure. If it's due to a mechanical failure you absolutely should not use it in the mean time. Just a get a new HD, install your OS of choice on it and then recover the old HD to a partition or folder on the drive. Have you verified the sanctity of your current HD? Did you run the drive diagnostic made by the manufacturer? What brand of HD failed? Seagates are far and away the most reliable. In the last 5 years they're the only brand that hasn't had a major embarassment on their hands. They're the quietest drives and have the longest warranty 5 years vs. 2-3 years from their competitors. Good Luck, Christian Blackburn Share this post Link to post
Christianb 8 Posted November 9, 2005 Hi Arin, Try having a friend burn you a linux live-CD to use in the mean time, so you can browse the web and do e-mail. Operating a defective drive is like driving a broken automobile, it can only get worse in the process. Good Luck, Christian Blackburn Share this post Link to post