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Data recovery and disk repair questions and discussions related to old-fashioned SATA, SAS, SCSI, IDE, MFM hard drives - any type of storage device that has moving parts
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How to Recover Data After Resetting Windows 10,

March 21st, 2018, 14:35

Hi,

Dear Friend,

Have a possibility recovery data from After Resetting Windows 10 ???

Please help to me recovery data.

Re: How to Recover Data After Resetting Windows 10,

March 21st, 2018, 14:58

damindaniroshana wrote:Hi,

Dear Friend,

Have a possibility recovery data from After Resetting Windows 10 ???

Please help to me recovery data.

There are lots of commercially available software programs that will scan the drive and recover data not overwritten by the new OS. R-Studio is a good one. http://www.r-studio.com. If that is unsuccessful then you need professional help.

Also the type of hard drive you have can also have an effect. For instance if it is an SSD with TRIM set then your data may not be recoverable.

Re: How to Recover Data After Resetting Windows 10,

March 21st, 2018, 16:50

And... do not continue to operate Windows from the hard drive you want to recover data from. This is the most common issue we see with DIY recovery. The customer not only boots to the drive they want to recover from, but they install the recovery software to the patient drive and they often save what they think are recovered files to the patient drive. In some cases we get, they even install Windows updates before attempting recovery.

Re: How to Recover Data After Resetting Windows 10,

March 21st, 2018, 16:57

Also seems you have MRT, clone the unused sectors only and then run r-studio

Re: How to Recover Data After Resetting Windows 10,

March 29th, 2018, 19:57

If that is unsuccessful then you need professional help.

If the data has been overwritten during the process (“full” or “low level” format), and if R-Studio (or similar) can't find anything beyond the current Windows install, then a professional is unlikely to recover anything either.

As a quick test : open the drive with WinHex or similar and see if the “free space” has data on it. If all you see are 00 then obviously there's nothing to recover.
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