Solotak wrote:
Well i can't remember if there was anything essential in there. I know there were a lot of disposable files that i could get again, however i can't remember which essential files i had on that drive. I normally backup but my method is manual and unorganised so i can't tell if some essential files were actually backed up. Even if i can see an index listing of the names of files in the directories would be a great way to decide whether recovery is critical.
If that's not possible i will immediately take an image. If there is a software that can do what i described above then great. If not any software that isn't in the thousands would be good. I had no idea software could be that expensive. But i'll have to postpone this or at least get step one done before i'm on holidays for a month. Is there any tools in hirens that would do an image capture well?
**there's something wrong with posting in firefox. I try to reply but it keeps asking to login, and it says i've succesfully login, i try to post and it comes up again.
Hello Solotak, Good to see you have read the guide 'Results of the D.I.Y solutions' and are now ready to perform DIY data recovery. I'm assuming then that you want to perform this exercise with tools that you don't have to pay for or are free? If so, Hirens does not have imaging tools at the raw level. However Norton Ghost is one, if you don't want to pay for this you could try torrents for it otherwise if you want purely free and are good with unix you can try an old favourite of mine called dd. If you want to see an index of the drives file system you would need to find its mft. I think you mentioned rstudio earlier as this program is capable of finding that for you.
I think GetDataBack from hirens can also do this, but I am a professional and don't use these tools for my work so maybe another amatuer here could assist.
Good luck my friend.