How do I recover an unallocated hard drive?

How do I recover an unallocated hard drive?

Using recovery software

  1. Download and install Disk Drill.
  2. On the opening screen, select the unallocated space that used to be your partition.
  3. When the scan has finished, click on Review found items.
  4. Select the files you want to recover by checking their checkbox.
  5. Choose a location to recover the files to.

How can I recover data from uninitialized disk?

The easiest way to fix the uninitialized disk is to initialize it directly.

  1. Right click on My Computer/This PC icon on desktop.
  2. Choose Manage from the menu.
  3. Select Disk Management under Storage.
  4. Right click on the disk which is not initialized.
  5. Choose Initialize Disk and wait for it to finish.

What are the symptoms of a faulty hard drive?

Common signs for a failing hard drive include sluggish performance, unusual noises (clicking or loud component sounds), and an increase number of corrupted files. These are textbook symptoms for the inevitably of a failing hard drive and action should be taken quickly to save your files from being lost.

How do I access an unallocated hard drive?

To allocate the unallocated space as a usable hard drive in Windows, follow these steps:

  1. Open the Disk Management console.
  2. Right-click the unallocated volume.
  3. Choose New Simple Volume from the shortcut menu.
  4. Click the Next button.
  5. Set the size of the new volume by using the Simple Volume Size in the MB text box.

How can I recover data from unknown not initialized hard drive?

Solution 1. Initialize Disk

  1. Right-click “My Computer” > “Manage” to run Disk Management.
  2. Here, right-click the hard drive and click “Initialize Disk”.
  3. In the dialogue box, select the disk(s) to initialize and choose MBR or GPT partition style.
  4. Select the Non-initialized Drive.
  5. Filter The Files You Want.
  6. Recover Lost Data.

How does a disk become uninitialized?

An external hard drive will mostly appear as uninitialized in Disk Management. This can occur due to viral attacks, a corrupted Master Boot Record, a partition loss or deletion, bad drive sectors, and computer file system corruption.

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