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| Tags: disk, dynamic, recovering |
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#1
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| Recovering Dynamic Disk
Hi all, I had 2 disks in my computer, a normal one with OS etc on, and a data one. When I set up the data one, little did I realize I was creating a 'dynamic disk'. Unfortunately, the other day, my first hard drive crashed and I've lost the boot sector etc on it so I've reinstalled Windows on it. Is there any easy / safe / cheap way to recover the data on the second hard disk as I'm no longer able to access it? I've tried a few data recovery software but they can't find anything. I tried the demo for a product called DataRecoveryUK and it seemed to find everything but it costs 70 quid to buy which is loads! Perhaps someone knows a way to recover the data without risking losing it. To me it just seems like I need to redefine the boot sector for the partitions on it which doesn't sound like much. Thanks in advance, Matt |
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#2
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| Re: Recovering Dynamic Disk "Matt Urbanowski" <sales@matturbanowski.co.uk> wrote in message news:ef7b87b2-36ae-4a2a-9461-5b9480e89395@g39g2000pri.googlegroups.com... > Hi all, > I had 2 disks in my computer, a normal one with OS etc on, and a data > one. > When I set up the data one, little did I realize I was creating a > 'dynamic disk'. > > Unfortunately, the other day, my first hard drive crashed and I've > lost the boot sector etc on it so I've reinstalled Windows on it. > > Is there any easy / safe / cheap way to recover the data on the second > hard disk as I'm no longer able to access it? I've tried a few data > recovery software but they can't find anything. I tried the demo for a > product called DataRecoveryUK and it seemed to find everything but it > costs 70 quid to buy which is loads! > > Perhaps someone knows a way to recover the data without risking losing > it. To me it just seems like I need to redefine the boot sector for > the partitions on it which doesn't sound like much. > > Thanks in advance, > Matt Matt: I assume the problem arose because the OS is the XP Home Ed. As such, this edition of the XP OS cannot access data on a dynamic disk, which it considers "foreign". Anyway, there have been some published hacks that supposedly can convert a dynamic disk to a basic disk without the loss of data - see http://thelazyadmin.com/index.php?/a...sic-Disks.html and http://faq.arstechnica.com/link.php?i=1806 . But, in general, the accepted workaround is to reinstall the disk in whatever OS, e.g., XP Professional, supports dynamic disks and retrieve whatever data you can through copying/moving the data to other media. Hopefully you have access to a machine with the XP Pro OS to accomplish this. That would be your best recourse if practical (assuming the problem results from the fact that you're currently using the XP Home Ed. as your OS). But it's an iffy situation in our experience. (I haven't accessed the above links in some time so I'm not entirely sure those URLs are current.) See also http://www.theeldergeek.com/hard_drives_10.htm for additional info concerning dynamic disks, and take a look at "How to Use Disk Management to Configure Dynamic Disks in Windows XP" http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308424/en-us#EQACAAA Anna |
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