To me it's somewhat hard to follow all the events that you are describing. Maybe it's just me, but if you could summarize all the important facts maybe I will be able to follow and give some more advice.
royair wrote:
i then created 2 partitions on it:
- 100 gb (for operating system, windows 7 x64)
- 2653gb (all the rest, for data, movies, project files etc.., configured as GPT drive)
Ok, Raid 10 with two partitions, I am with you so far.
royair wrote:
I then took the PC to my local computer store, and asked them to replce the whole Raid array with 1.5tb hdd's of Western
Digital. (which i find more reliable)
what they did was:
taking out 1 seagate drive, swapping with a WD drive and using "intel matrix storage" to "rebuild" the array
Ok, they replaced the faulty Seagate drive with the WD and atempted to rebuild the array.
Still following you.
royair wrote:
they did so to the 4th and 3rd but on the 2nd drive some error happend and windows restarted, and it wasnt able to load again
Now I am starting to get lost, they did what with the 4th and the 3rd?
royair wrote:
while windows starting i got a message regarding "D:" "E:" drives (100gb, 2563GB) are
corrupted and need to be checked by CHKDSK.
Checkdisk is not your friend, this certainly did not help.
royair wrote:
so windows started scanning D: & E:
windows found alot of "Orphan" files and did somthing to them (can't tell exactly what...)
Basically it took them and then stored them somewhere else and renamed them to a file with ".CHK" extension. You could try something like UnCHK
http://www.ericphelps.com/uncheck/royair wrote:
Now both drives were visible (using file explorer) BUT -> files inside were corrupted..
some movies were playable but they stutter and some werent playable at all..
images are partially (meaning you can see only half of it)
.txt files though were readable...
Sounds like somehow the rebuild was not 100% successful
royair wrote:
i still have the old seagate drives (actually only 2 out of 3, one of them isnt recognized by windows in any way although
connected). are they usefull?
when i tried to connect them together with the new WD drives i got an error for the RAID controller that they are not members
of the array.
Possible... I certainly would hang on to the drive. Due to the whole swapping and changing and using one drive and then trying the other and so forth, your Raid is probably in bad shape.
I doubt that any recovery software will help you. If your data is of value then I would recommend sending it to a DR firm.