@omi786:
Thanks for the info.
omi786 wrote:
Ontrack software shows file17, 18,19 and 20.. with its proper size..
FYI, in this situation, showing the correct size does not mean that the data itself will be correct.
omi786 wrote:
New data, after 150gb folder deletion, was not filled 100% on that drive.. Drive is 1TB..
But disk manufacturers give capacity in
decimal TB i.e. a 1TB disk has approx 10^12 bytes. Windows (and other OS I know, except some versions of MacOS) list filesystem space in
binary units i.e. powers of 2 (strictly these units should be written as GiB, TiB etc., but few people or OS do that in practice - which is where the confusion comes from!).
So an empty approx "1TB" (decimal TB) disk, has approx 931GiB (binary GB) of available space, as reported by Windows.
omi786 wrote:
Data in drive when the required folder existed was 600GB
150Gb folder deleted, remaining data 450Gb.. then new of 450-500 gb was copied..
See above (and the posts from other members). Using the numbers provided by you, the disk must have been filled. Looking in the title you used for the thread, you even included the Windows error message for when drive D is filled: "No free space left in d".
So as others have also told you, this data seems unrecoverable, based on the numbers you have given. However, trying the R-Undelete demo (as suggested by Alt(R-TT) who works for the makers of R-Undelete) loses you nothing except time, so you can try that s/w instead of the Ontrack demo s/w you are currently using. Please tell us what you find!
Note: You must not install that R-Undelete demo s/w (or install any other s/w, or do any other writing) onto that 1TB disk (from which you want to recover data).
Good luck!