Lost Partitions

T

TDS

Have a 300 GB drive that was partitioned into three separate drives. Came
back from vacation and the partitions are all gone. The drive still shows up
in the computer management / disk management console, but the entire drive
shows up as "unallocated". Is there a way to recover these partitions so
that I do not lose the data? The format was NTFS.

Terry
 
C

CBFalconer

TDS said:
Have a 300 GB drive that was partitioned into three separate drives.
Came back from vacation and the partitions are all gone. The drive
still shows up in the computer management / disk management console,
but the entire drive shows up as "unallocated". Is there a way to
recover these partitions so that I do not lose the data? The format
was NTFS.

If you can remember (or wrote down) the original partitioning and
can recreate it exactly you have a chance. Otherwise, no.
 
K

kony

Have a 300 GB drive that was partitioned into three separate drives. Came
back from vacation and the partitions are all gone. The drive still shows up
in the computer management / disk management console, but the entire drive
shows up as "unallocated". Is there a way to recover these partitions so
that I do not lose the data? The format was NTFS.

Terry

Depends on why it's lost. I suggest that you not run this
system, leaving it turned off or at least that drive
unplugged until you are ready to try to recover the data, so
there is least amount of time/wear on it until then.

You might try software like EasyRecovery. It will take
hours trying to recover, and will need a 2nd drive in the
system (enough free space and a folder for that, not
necessarily an empty drive) to save anything it finds.

Otherwise, or if the data is valuable, you should contact a
data recovery center before proceeding.
 
P

Plato

TDS said:
Have a 300 GB drive that was partitioned into three separate drives. Came
back from vacation and the partitions are all gone. The drive still shows up
in the computer management / disk management console, but the entire drive
shows up as "unallocated". Is there a way to recover these partitions so
that I do not lose the data? The format was NTFS.

Too bad you didnt have any good surge protection for your computer.
 
D

David Sudlow

TDS said:
Have a 300 GB drive that was partitioned into three separate drives. Came
back from vacation and the partitions are all gone. The drive still shows up
in the computer management / disk management console, but the entire drive
shows up as "unallocated". Is there a way to recover these partitions so
that I do not lose the data? The format was NTFS.

Terry

You need to find out how badly damaged the data on the disk is. If it is
'just' a corrupt partition table you may be able to recover some.

gpart (a linux tool) may be able to guess the partition table for you.

First try booting from a live cd (say Ubuntu) and see if the partitions
are recognised there - i.e. check first that it is not a windows issue
rather than a problem with the disk.

See what fdisk says about the partitions, or even see what the partition
table itself says. (You can even do this from within windows with a
program such as Winhex).
 
N

nobody

In <[email protected]>, on 06/22/07
at 01:16 PM, "TDS" <[email protected]> said:


Have a 300 GB drive that was partitioned into three separate drives. Came
back from vacation and the partitions are all gone. The drive still
shows up in the computer management / disk management console, but the
entire drive shows up as "unallocated". Is there a way to recover these
partitions so that I do not lose the data? The format was NTFS.


Perhaps DFSEE can help with this. www.dfsee.com



Alan

--

----------------------------------------------------------------------
** Please use address alanh77[at]comcast.net to reply via e-mail. **

Posted using registered MR/2 ICE Newsreader #564 and eComStation 1.21

BBS - The Nerve Center Telnet FidoNet 261/1000 tncbbs.no-ip.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top