| 1. |
Solve : Corrupt partition table? |
|
Answer» I've had 2 HDD's in my PC: WDD's of 320 GB and a small IBM's of 13 GB (used for documents) divided in total of 3 partitions. The IBM started to MALFUNCTION, so I decided to move the files from it to the WDD (created a seperate partition, RESIZED one on it and MADE room for the new one). Files moved OK, EVERYTHING seemed fine, but then it wouldn't boot. Tried to repair MBR with win7 instalation disc, no results. Installed a fresh copy of windows, but my second partition (not the primary nor the one with the docs is corrupted. Can't acess it, but I still have a bunch of important files on it. Tried various software for saving those files, but no dice... any help? I'm having trouble understanding what you are trying to do. Is the question about accessing files on a DIFFERENT Windows installation than the one to which you are booted? it's not the primary partition i can't access. Windows boots fine, but when i try to access the D: partition, it says that it's corrupted. When booting up the PC, it tries to check that partition, but then it says that the Master file table is corrupted. Nothing he can do about it, skips the chkdsk and continues to boot. Access denied as you do not have sufficient privileges.As I said - open an ELEVATED command prompt (right-click on a command prompt window icon and "run as administrator") Quote The type of File system is NTFS same thing when booting.If Microsoft's Checkdisk (chkdsk) failed to repair the MFT, you could try a repair tool like the free TestDisk. http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Download In the Advanced menu, select your NTFS partition, choose Boot, then Repair MFT. TestDisk will compare the MFT and MFT mirror (its backup). If the MFT is damaged, it will try to repair the MFT using the backup. If the MFT backup is damaged, it will use the main MFT. If both MFT and MFTMirr are damaged and thus cannot be repaired using TestDisk, you might want to try commercial software like Zero Assumption Recovery, GetDataBack for NTFS or Restorer 2000. Tnx for the info will give it a shot, see what happens and hopefully save my files |
|