tldr:
os is vista business
task manager was used to shut down explorer, which for some reason did not automatically restart
began getting an 'i/o error; disk access failure' message from peerblock, which is installed onto c drive
attempted to save a file in notepad++, seemed successful so i saved all of my work, some on c and some on an external hdd.
upon reboot, vista installed an update
all of the files i had saved after explorer was killed became zer0 size files, even the ones on the external hdd ... only the files i had saved were affected
could not find the original files using a file system check, easus data recovery or recuva.
HELP!!!
i'm not sure exactly what happened ...
the last time i used my pc, explorer was acting really slowly, so i called up the task manager and shut down explorer, expecting vista to restart it automatically ... oddly, that did not happen. following that, peerblock began intermittently giving some message about an 'i/o error; disk access failure', which is troubling because it is installed onto c drive ... i started panicking because i'd typed up quite a bit that i hadn't saved and, fearing the worst, i attempted to save a new file in notepad++. it seemed sucessful, so i then continued to save all of my work in progress and rebooted.
upon reboot, vista immediately began installing an update. when that finished, i attempted to resume my work and found that all of the files i had just saved had been overwritten into zero size files. some of these files represented more than a year's worth of work.
a file system check did not restore the files, so i tried easus data recovery and recuva and found that neither were able to locate the previous versions of these files.
is there any program or tool that can restore the files i just lost?
EDIT: hd tune reports 0.0% damaged blocks
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Is There Any Way To Get My Data Back?
#2
Posted 25 February 2013 - 09:18 PM
Oh vista...this is tricky.
When you delete a file,it doesnt really delete.Its like a ghost,and they file stays there unused till new "data" is put there which overwrites the old stuff.Have you tried putting HDD In another PC?
When you delete a file,it doesnt really delete.Its like a ghost,and they file stays there unused till new "data" is put there which overwrites the old stuff.Have you tried putting HDD In another PC?
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#3
Posted 28 February 2013 - 08:02 PM
The one program I recommend for recovering deleted files (programs, data, whatever) is called Undelete360, available at its own website undelete360.com. Its totally freeware with no limits on data recovered. Its very fast, rates recovery chances, and provides for the files to be readably viewable. I've had good luck using it.
#5
Posted 29 May 2013 - 07:40 PM
A little late to the party, but you're describing impending hardware(hddo) failure.I have about 30 years around the service bench,and it seems like a damaged sector in the non-movable blocks of the windows install.Noting that smartdrv hasn't fixed this you're probably looking at lost data.Always have *two* backups of mission critical data.I have managed to store data going back to '86, and that wasn't easy in the era of >200lb. 1gb storage drives.
#6
Posted 30 May 2013 - 02:19 AM
BearPup, on 28 February 2013 - 08:02 PM, said:
The one program I recommend for recovering deleted files (programs, data, whatever) is called Undelete360
Why are you recommending an UNdelete program to recover files that were NOT deleted?
MLStrand56
This post has been edited by MLStrand56: 30 May 2013 - 02:21 AM
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