

- #Hirens boot cd ntfs undelete code#
- #Hirens boot cd ntfs undelete windows 7#
- #Hirens boot cd ntfs undelete windows#
With type code 48 in file 15710" (again, 15710 was just the first instance) Then for a 'little' while starting giving the message: "File record segment 28 is unreadable" (28 the first time, changed every line, obviously) "Windows has checked the file system and found no problems."Īlso had: "Failed to transfer logged message to the event log with status 50." (Pretty sure this appeared after every variation) That ran fine (lots of numbers and such for which I have photos) and ended with:
#Hirens boot cd ntfs undelete windows#
(I know the repair said Windows was on E:, but there was some time between that and running this, and I just did what the instructions said first) I will post what seems like the relevant information from each variation, but I took photos - so if I'm missing vital info, let me know and I may have it. I did several variations of this as I tried to figure out the appropriate specifics. The first was to run chkdsk in the Command Prompt

I did some googling and found a few people with similar problems posting over the years and looked at the answers they were given. Volume #: Volume 4 | Ltr: | Label: SAMSUNG_REC | Fs: NTFS | Type: Partition | Size: 19 GB | Status: Healthy | Info: Hidden Volume #: Volume 3 | Ltr: D | Label: | Fs: NTFS | Type: Partition | Size: 406 GB | Status: Healthy Volume #: Volume 2 | Ltr: E | Label: | Fs: RAW | Type: Partition | Size: 272 GB | Status: Healthy Volume #: Volume 1 | Ltr: C | Label: SYSTEM | Fs: NTFS | Type: Partition | Size: 100 MB | Status: Healthy Volume #: Volume 0 | Ltr: F | Label: | Fs: | Type: DVD-ROM | Size: 0B | Status: No Media Partition #: Partition 3 | Type: OEM | Size: 19 GB | Offset: 678 GB Partition #: Partition 4 | Type: Logical | Size: 406 GB | Offset: 272 GB Partition #: Partition 0 | Type: Extended | Size: 406 GB | Offset: 272 GB Partition #: Partition 2 | Type: Primary | Size: 272 GB | Offset: 101 MB Partition #: Partition 1 | Type: Primary | Size: 100 MB | Offset: 1024 KB Which gave me (not displayed like this, but in a table format):ĭisk #: Disk 0 | Status: Online | Size: 698 GB | Free: 1024 KB | Dyn: | Gpt: In the Command Prompt, I ran DISKPART, then entered this command: This is actually out of sequence, but since it only provided information, rather than try to fix anything, I figured it should go earlier "No restore points have been created on your computer's system drive." I'd already run Startup Repair, so I choose System Restore:
#Hirens boot cd ntfs undelete windows 7#
Operating system: Windows 7 on (E:) Local DiskĪnd gave the standard options: Startup Repair, System Restore, System Image Recovery, Windows Memory Diagnostic, Command Prompt Next, I clicked on the "View advanced options.," which took me to the System Recovery Options, which read: I selected "view diagnostic and repair details, and here is what it displayed:

"View advanced options for system recovery and support." "A harddisk problem is preventing Windows from starting.Ĭontact your system administrator or computer manufacturer to determine if you need to repair or replace the disk. This ran for a LONG time, as in a couple days.Īt some point said "Attempting Repairs.Repairing disk errors." Obvious first move, I ran the Startup Repair. Here's what I tried, in order as best I can. I don't really know which partition or 'drive' was supposed to be for what, there appears to be C,D,E, and F drives, an unlettered one, and an X (more details below). We do NOT have an installation disk, Windows came pre-loaded I don't particularly care about fixing the thing we just want to be able to look through the files and see if there are any documents, pictures, etc, we want to save. Since then, I have tried searching for solutions all over the web and gone through a number of processes meant to fix it to no avail. Things were very busy at the time, so I set it aside a few months, until last week (which is why I don't remember exactly how the problem started). I can interrupt it to go to the System Recovery Options, the BIOS, or to Samsung's recovery tool (more on that later). I'm not sure I even did anything - but at some point, the computer booted to the Windows Startup Repair (maybe intentionally? Sorry, this is the low-info part), and then would only do that. Unfortunately, it was long enough a ago that I don't remember what I actually did. We ran into a problem with my wife's Samsung laptop: she couldn't remember the password. I've tried a ​bunch​ of stuff, so I'm going to try to outline it all and give as much information as possible.Ī few months ago, we were trying to recycle all our old electronics, so we wanted to get any files worth keeping off of them before wiping them and sending them to the recycling people. BLUF: I'm trying to save files from my wife's dying laptop, but it always goes to Startup Repair.
