F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Boot Drive

Boot Drive

Boot Drive

G
Gillious
Member
166
09-05-2016, 03:53 PM
#1
It seems the primary storage area might have been erased and labeled as unallocated. Verify this by starting in Windows Recovery mode using the hard drive and launching Command Prompt. Run the diskpart list disk command to check the status. If you can access Windows, proceed to Disk Management and capture the output for review.
G
Gillious
09-05-2016, 03:53 PM #1

It seems the primary storage area might have been erased and labeled as unallocated. Verify this by starting in Windows Recovery mode using the hard drive and launching Command Prompt. Run the diskpart list disk command to check the status. If you can access Windows, proceed to Disk Management and capture the output for review.

J
josh50
Member
72
09-05-2016, 08:17 PM
#2
Based on your actions, you could access your drive management, change the remaining drive's letter, and retrieve your data.
J
josh50
09-05-2016, 08:17 PM #2

Based on your actions, you could access your drive management, change the remaining drive's letter, and retrieve your data.

B
BrutusPirate
Junior Member
30
09-08-2016, 05:27 AM
#3
That's what im getting.
B
BrutusPirate
09-08-2016, 05:27 AM #3

That's what im getting.

S
Sims4fun
Member
191
09-08-2016, 02:23 PM
#4
My laptop's current capacity is 500 gigabytes since I replaced the failing one that couldn't start.
S
Sims4fun
09-08-2016, 02:23 PM #4

My laptop's current capacity is 500 gigabytes since I replaced the failing one that couldn't start.

T
toonchagirl
Member
53
09-28-2016, 11:53 AM
#5
What does Disk Management say?
T
toonchagirl
09-28-2016, 11:53 AM #5

What does Disk Management say?

I
Izzardd
Junior Member
10
09-28-2016, 12:03 PM
#6
Yeah, you're right. What's up?
I
Izzardd
09-28-2016, 12:03 PM #6

Yeah, you're right. What's up?

M
miniwolf35
Junior Member
18
10-05-2016, 12:06 PM
#7
It indicates the space is unallocated, meaning you likely won’t regain it. But you might recover certain items if the formatting wasn’t thorough. There are probably options online to help retrieve deleted data—searching quickly could yield useful results.
M
miniwolf35
10-05-2016, 12:06 PM #7

It indicates the space is unallocated, meaning you likely won’t regain it. But you might recover certain items if the formatting wasn’t thorough. There are probably options online to help retrieve deleted data—searching quickly could yield useful results.

A
Asmeu
Junior Member
28
10-06-2016, 01:57 PM
#8
It seems like you're suggesting it's too late already.
A
Asmeu
10-06-2016, 01:57 PM #8

It seems like you're suggesting it's too late already.

P
puffyshadow8
Member
156
10-08-2016, 07:58 AM
#9
Welp, you've overwrited the drive with a boot disk image. You won't be able to recover your partitions anymore, you've probably destroyed the old partition table. Luckily, you can try using software like PhotoRec to recover individual files, but the issue is that since the partition table is gone, all the files are just that, *data*, no filename or where it was originally stored. So you're gonna have to sift through potentially gigabytes of data to recover what you need. To make matters worse, anything that's been overwritten by flashing the drive with the boot image is gone, there won't be any way to recover anything that was in the first 32 GBs in the drive. Hopefully that's all just OS data though.
P
puffyshadow8
10-08-2016, 07:58 AM #9

Welp, you've overwrited the drive with a boot disk image. You won't be able to recover your partitions anymore, you've probably destroyed the old partition table. Luckily, you can try using software like PhotoRec to recover individual files, but the issue is that since the partition table is gone, all the files are just that, *data*, no filename or where it was originally stored. So you're gonna have to sift through potentially gigabytes of data to recover what you need. To make matters worse, anything that's been overwritten by flashing the drive with the boot image is gone, there won't be any way to recover anything that was in the first 32 GBs in the drive. Hopefully that's all just OS data though.