1) I did try File, ->Open: Same result.
2) No, I did not use (have) a copy (oops?)
3) Yes, the file is approx. 2.06 GB
4) No, I do not have a backup.
Archiving question: I archive on a monthly basis, and usually just add to
the existing archive. What would you suggest (in order to keep the archive
files below 2GB): that when one archives, to create a new archive.pst each
time? I receive approx 50-60 emails daily and discard very few of them.
PS: You may see another query from me on this list regarding the same
subject; please ignore. When I posted the first query, I got a message that
the service was unavailable and that I should try later, which I then did
without noticing that the first query did in fact register. Apologies!
"VanguardLH" wrote:
> Johann Swart wrote:
>
> > WIN2K Pro SP4
> > Outlook 2K SP3 - Internet Mail Only - Security Update
> > I need to retrieve information from an Outlook archive file.
> > When I attempt to import the archive.pst, I first get the message
> > "Properties for this information service must be defined prior to use." I
> > then click on OK (only choice), and then get a message "Errors have been
> > detected in the file D:\archive.pst. Quit all mail enabled applications, the
> > use the Inbox Repair Tool." Using the procedure on
> > http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ou...549331033.aspx, I run
> > scanpst.exe, but at the end of phase 4/8 I get the message "An error has
> > occurred which caused the scan to be stopped. No changes have been made to
> > the scanned file." That then seems to be the end of the road.
> > Does this mean that my achive file is totally useless, or is there perhaps
> > another avenue to follow?
>
> Use File -> Open to load the archive .pst file into Outlook. Does that
> work?
>
> For safety sake, did you run scanpst.exe on a *copy* of your archive
> ..pst file?
>
> Scanpst is not guaranteed to fix a corrupted .pst file. I believe it
> will truncate the file if it is over the 2GB (1.87GiB) limit. You
> didn't mention the size of the original .pst file.
>
> Got backups from which you can restore an older copy of the .pst file?
>