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    Results 1 to 7 of 7
    1. #1
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Location
      Eastern Virginia
      Posts
      3,963
      Country Flag: United States

      I need a computer guru expert:

      Today something happened to my second hard drive, it is partitioned into 3 drives; F, G, & H. F works fine, but G & H tells me: The file or directory is corrupted and unreadable. If I right pick on My COmputer & go to Manage, then Disk Management. Drive F says it is NTFS, but G & H does not. I tried the command convert {drive} /FS:NTFS & it says they are already NTFS. I have data on these that I don't want to loose. Anyone have any idea what I can do to save it?

      Thanks.

      Scot
      86 Monte SS



    2. #2
      Join Date
      Oct 2004
      Location
      Delaware, OH
      Posts
      1,379
      Scot, You didn't say what version of WinDOZE you're running but this might help.

      http://support.microsoft.com/kb/311724/en-us

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Jul 2005
      Location
      Eastern Virginia
      Posts
      3,963
      Country Flag: United States
      Sorry I am running XP.

      CHKDSK tells me this:
      C:\WINDOWS\system32>chkdsk g:
      The type of the file system is NTFS.
      Unable to determine volume version and state. CHKDSK aborted.
      Scot
      86 Monte SS


    4. #4
      Join Date
      Oct 2004
      Location
      Delaware, OH
      Posts
      1,379
      Looks like you might need a 3rd-party utility to recover your data. Try looking at the forum below. I scanned a few responses and some look promising.

      http://groups.google.com/groups?q=%2...start=10&sa=N&

      HTH

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Mar 2005
      Location
      Miamisburg, Oh
      Posts
      2,396
      Samckitt, please email me your ph. number and I might be able to help you out. I have a few s/w tools that may help you.
      It kinda sounds like the FAT (file allocation table) is corrupt, but it may be more than that also.

      Also, just out of curiosity, I wonder what brand and size the drive is? I'm also curious whether your BIOS recognizes the drive correctly. Lastly, to be 100% safe, you should probably run some virus and malware checkers.


      BA
      [email protected]

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Dec 2002
      Location
      Lost Wages, Nevada
      Posts
      2,683
      Country Flag: United States
      It is a FAT issue.

      If you have the means, "WinPE" would be my choice to work this issue.

      But Id take BA's offerings first.

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Mar 2005
      Location
      Miamisburg, Oh
      Posts
      2,396
      WinPE IS pretty damn cool.




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