F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Notebooks You are getting a surprise repair on your new LG Gram when you think everything is fine.

You are getting a surprise repair on your new LG Gram when you think everything is fine.

You are getting a surprise repair on your new LG Gram when you think everything is fine.

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L
181
04-01-2026, 05:15 PM
#1
Help me, I'm so upset! On my LG Gram laptop, I accidentally started a PC recovery from the console. Now when I turn it on, it asks if I want to proceed with the restore. Can I just reset my hard disk in two seconds? If not, how do I get back my data? Thanks so much for any help.
L
LePoteDuQuebec
04-01-2026, 05:15 PM #1

Help me, I'm so upset! On my LG Gram laptop, I accidentally started a PC recovery from the console. Now when I turn it on, it asks if I want to proceed with the restore. Can I just reset my hard disk in two seconds? If not, how do I get back my data? Thanks so much for any help.

J
jonttutonttu1
Member
214
04-01-2026, 09:54 PM
#2
It might take a few steps to wipe all of your files, so if you haven't reached that point yet, just close it. If you are on the LG Recovery Center, click the red X in the top right corner and leave without saving anything. Then you will start up Windows normally. If you pressed 'Next' after seeing the warning about losing data from a factory reset, then all your files were gone forever.
J
jonttutonttu1
04-01-2026, 09:54 PM #2

It might take a few steps to wipe all of your files, so if you haven't reached that point yet, just close it. If you are on the LG Recovery Center, click the red X in the top right corner and leave without saving anything. Then you will start up Windows normally. If you pressed 'Next' after seeing the warning about losing data from a factory reset, then all your files were gone forever.

R
ricby
Senior Member
681
04-18-2026, 05:50 PM
#3
So, everything got wiped out in a single move? Are we looking at any chance of getting it back? Just remember, I didn't mean to make LG look bad.
R
ricby
04-18-2026, 05:50 PM #3

So, everything got wiped out in a single move? Are we looking at any chance of getting it back? Just remember, I didn't mean to make LG look bad.

N
Nathcid_12
Junior Member
3
04-18-2026, 06:07 PM
#4
What kind of disk is it? If you put it on another computer either directly or inside a box over USB, you might be able to get the stuff back onto another drive using a little program called Recuva. If it was just a few seconds, the drive didn't have all its data wiped out with zeros, so at least some of the files are still there in theory. The question is if it wrote over something quickly, and that stuff would be gone (that's why keeping backups, especially more than one backup, of important things like your PC is just as basic as changing the filter in a furnace or the oil in your car).
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Nathcid_12
04-18-2026, 06:07 PM #4

What kind of disk is it? If you put it on another computer either directly or inside a box over USB, you might be able to get the stuff back onto another drive using a little program called Recuva. If it was just a few seconds, the drive didn't have all its data wiped out with zeros, so at least some of the files are still there in theory. The question is if it wrote over something quickly, and that stuff would be gone (that's why keeping backups, especially more than one backup, of important things like your PC is just as basic as changing the filter in a furnace or the oil in your car).

M
Mr_StarYT
Junior Member
46
05-02-2026, 10:06 AM
#5
At the very least, all your partition details were wiped clean. If you can put that drive in another computer or use some other method, maybe DMDE could find what's missing. DMDE Data Recovery for PC and Mac is a strong tool to help search for, edit, and restore lost data on hard drives. You get up to 4000 free files from any folder you pick it out of, no strings attached. dmde.com
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Mr_StarYT
05-02-2026, 10:06 AM #5

At the very least, all your partition details were wiped clean. If you can put that drive in another computer or use some other method, maybe DMDE could find what's missing. DMDE Data Recovery for PC and Mac is a strong tool to help search for, edit, and restore lost data on hard drives. You get up to 4000 free files from any folder you pick it out of, no strings attached. dmde.com

B
biscuitnator
Junior Member
42
05-02-2026, 11:59 AM
#6
It only took four seconds. Do you need a fancy external stick like the BC711 NVMe to fix it?
B
biscuitnator
05-02-2026, 11:59 AM #6

It only took four seconds. Do you need a fancy external stick like the BC711 NVMe to fix it?

X
XskyDragonX
Member
64
05-02-2026, 05:02 PM
#7
It has to link up with another system.
X
XskyDragonX
05-02-2026, 05:02 PM #7

It has to link up with another system.

J
JaFue02
Junior Member
2
05-10-2026, 04:05 PM
#8
If you just entered the recovery screen and didn't move forward yet, your files are still safe there. It takes about 5 or 6 steps to delete everything. Your hard drive (SSD) is very fast and can write a lot of data in just four seconds. But that doesn't mean your stuff is gone; you'd have to take the SSD out to find it back. I didn't mean anyone was at fault for what the messages on the laptop told me. The same thing happens if you ignored the warning signs. Your data stays on the drive until someone actually moves it away or starts the deletion process.
J
JaFue02
05-10-2026, 04:05 PM #8

If you just entered the recovery screen and didn't move forward yet, your files are still safe there. It takes about 5 or 6 steps to delete everything. Your hard drive (SSD) is very fast and can write a lot of data in just four seconds. But that doesn't mean your stuff is gone; you'd have to take the SSD out to find it back. I didn't mean anyone was at fault for what the messages on the laptop told me. The same thing happens if you ignored the warning signs. Your data stays on the drive until someone actually moves it away or starts the deletion process.

G
garidos1
Junior Member
27
05-10-2026, 07:15 PM
#9
Caveat to this... Some/most of the data may be recoverable. I strongly doubt that the entire drive including the whole OS is 100% recoverable exactly as it was. Recovering half of a txt file in a readable condition is one thing. 100% of the system as it was is something else.
G
garidos1
05-10-2026, 07:15 PM #9

Caveat to this... Some/most of the data may be recoverable. I strongly doubt that the entire drive including the whole OS is 100% recoverable exactly as it was. Recovering half of a txt file in a readable condition is one thing. 100% of the system as it was is something else.

S
Surgeon3
Member
144
05-11-2026, 01:36 AM
#10
If you need an NVMe, you usually put it into another computer or set up new Windows on the old drive and then move your data from there. Most of your information should be safe to get back, but you can't count 100% sureness in this situation. Once you recover everything and store it safely somewhere else, wipe out the hard drive and start a fresh install of Windows. Also make plans for the future since losing data without backups is easy to happen again.
S
Surgeon3
05-11-2026, 01:36 AM #10

If you need an NVMe, you usually put it into another computer or set up new Windows on the old drive and then move your data from there. Most of your information should be safe to get back, but you can't count 100% sureness in this situation. Once you recover everything and store it safely somewhere else, wipe out the hard drive and start a fresh install of Windows. Also make plans for the future since losing data without backups is easy to happen again.

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