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Home / Should I reformat a hard drive before using a data recovery program?Should I reformat a hard drive before using a data recovery program?
Last Updated on Sunday, 11 April 2010 09:29 Written by databank Sunday, 11 April 2010 09:29
My old hard drive is corrupted and would like to save files using a data recovery program I downloaded. But getting the program to read is difficult. You need to reformat your hard drive? When I say this format will erase all data on disk, but on other sites I’ve read, it should be fine and should still be able to recover files. Which is correct?
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If you do a full format, all the data on the disk will be overwritten with the formatting data – and you will lose the data you want to retrieve.
There is a type of formatting called “quick format” but that erases all the folder data, and that means you will have even more problems finding the data you want.
You say getting the program to read it is difficult. If the hard drive is failing, then you will have enormous problems getting any program to work right.
If the only problem is corrupted folder structures, then a quick format *might* work to erase all of the corrupted data, leaving the other data. Then your data recovery program would have to scan the entire hard drive.
I use the free Recuva program from Piriform to recover data, but I don’t know how it would work in your situation. Recuva has the ability to scan all the hard drive sectors, it is an option. If you can get it to work, you will need another drive to have a place to copy the selected data.
http://www.piriform.com/recuva
Wikipedia article about Recuva:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recuva
There are programs available that will read the data directly off the sectors of the hard drive and present it in hexadecimal format, but that doesn’t mean you can make enough sense out of the data to be able to recover it. The better programs also cost money.
Monday, March 8, 2010
DiskGetor data recovery is best recover formatted hdd software , recover data from formatted hdd(hard drive disk).
http://www.diskgetor.com