OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1597
|
"Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
#991989 - 08/06/12 07:41 PM
|
|
|
|
I have lost count of the number of times in these forums I have trumpeted from the
rooftops the blissfully useful TrueImage - till now.
I bought a new drive,
and imaged the old drive onto my massive 500gig USB external SATA drive, which was about
(yes 'was') 80% full with data archives, drive images of the living room Shuttle, Music PC
which I have just installed Win7/64 bit on, work PC and one I had just built for a
disabled friend.
So I made the image and then put in the new hard drive, and
told Trueimage to recover the image from the external USB to the new drive. But somehow,
and yes I suppose it must have been a fault on my part, but instead of recovering to the
new drive - it recovered to my 500 external drive though how I don't know because the
drive I pointed it to the drive which was reprted as the new 160gig drive and not the
500gig of the external USB drive, so it copied/recovered the image back to itself
somehow?
Now I have lost so much data my stomach is in knots, and the whole
point of buying the new drive was to freeup more space to make sure I had a full backup of
everything, now all I have on my 500gig drive is a Win7 installation, everything else is
gone.
If I had a butler I would ask him to decanter me some port and pass me
the loaded Smith & Wesson, closing the door on his way out. :-(
I cannot
imagine there is any software that will unformat a drive, that is hope against hope
|
dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2133
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#991993 - 08/06/12 08:36 PM
|
|
|
|
Depending on the file system, actually, sometimes you can indeed undo a format,
particularly where the files were written as a continuous write (so there is no
fragmentation), as something like a disk image will usually be, details are highly file
system specific and worst case involve the use of a sector editor.
Finger
trouble like that is why a single level of backup is not that helpful, having a couple of
sets of backup media and rotating them (including at least one kept off site) is much
safer.
Regards, Dan (Who got backup religion big time some years back, the
learning experience involved a week of staring at a sector editor while carefully
reconstructing a file system).
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
|
Ojustaboo
Joined: 14/10/11
Posts: 110
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#991995 - 08/06/12 09:01 PM
|
|
|
I've successfully recovered everything by using http://www.easeus.com/datarecoverywizardpro/It's expensive
($90 for pro version). It literally took around 16 hours to chug its way through the disk,
but it did find everything. This was after deleting the wrong disk from the
windows install menu, I hadn't actually written anything to the disk. I did
just see on it's page that it has an article on recovering from what you've done http://www.easeus.com/datarecoverywizard/recover-ghosted-image-data.htmand if I read the site properly, the demo will let you see what it can
actually recover, so that you know in advance whether it's worth buying or not.
|
TheBev
Joined: 23/06/08
Posts: 93
Loc: London
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#991996 - 08/06/12 09:14 PM
|
|
|
Hi -
that is a nightmare.
I am not sure if this will help for
your situation but here goes. I once inadvertently deleted a large internal storage drive
thus losing all data, or so I thought. I managed this stupidity by reformatting 1st thing
before fully awake, 
stopped myself before actually starting the installation though - but as I say, partition
deleted.. Doh!
Anyway - after looking at a few trial paid for programs which
for me were universally useless, I chanced across TestDisk . A little
freebie which after running overnight recovered the lot, &, as far as I'm aware,
without a glitch.
Gotta be worth a shot before shelling out any hard earned in my
(inexpert) opinion.
Anyway, it's full capabilities are beyond my ken,
but.. it may work for you & if you try I hope it does.
-------------------- "The tech gets better, the user error remains the same.." Roberts Plant
|
The Elf
active member
Joined: 14/08/01
Posts: 8216
Loc: Sheffield, UK
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992026 - 09/06/12 08:43 AM
|
|
|
Quote OneWorld:
But somehow, and
yes I suppose it must have been a fault on my part, but instead of recovering to the new
drive - it recovered to my 500 external drive
So, to be fair, this is a not a fault of TrueImage. It could have
happened with any recovery software. It was simply a user error, and that's a constant
'danger' in anything we do.
It also highlights the fact that you actually don't
have a proper backup regime. One backup is simply not enough (important data needs to
reside in at least three places) - I'd urge you to set up a grandfather/father/son backup
system before anything like this happens again. Hard drives are cheap enough now, so
there's really no reason to risk losing data.
Sympathies though. Hopefully one
of the ideas above may help.
-------------------- An Eagle for an Emperor, A Kestrel for a Knave.
|
BJG145
Joined: 06/08/05
Posts: 2187
Loc: Norwich UK
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992037 - 09/06/12 09:34 AM
|
|
|
Sorry to hear that OneWorld. Don't write anything to the disk until you've exhausted the
possibilities of recovering it.
From this thread, it sounds like there might
be some hope of getting at the data beyond the size of the restored image.
http://www.wilderssecurity.com/showthread.php?t=186409
Reminds me of the Benny Blanco interview in the current SOS, where his mentor Disco D's
methods "included at one point erasing Blanco's entire hard drive, and at another throwing
his CDs out of the window."
If you can't get it back, then take comfort from
the liberating creative possibilities of a blank canvas.
|
Trebor Flow
Joined: 29/11/05
Posts: 235
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992060 - 09/06/12 11:15 AM
|
|
|
|
Sheesh - bad luck.
It happened to me many years ago.
Now I work on
the principle if I haven't got DATA in THREE separate physical locations (hard drives)
then it's already lost! It cost more to back-up to three discreet drives but it
really is worth every penny.
Hope you get it sorted, losing DATA is really
frustrating to say the least.
tf
|
OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1597
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992082 - 09/06/12 01:55 PM
|
|
|
|
gadzooks, they don't make Smith & Wessons like they used to, am still here!
Thank's very much everyone. Collating all the info you've given here, and coming across
an old IDE external drive which had about 40% of what I'd lost, phew, and Recova, and
taking comfort by those words - "consider the liberating impact of a blank canvas" which
remined me, it's only data, in the greater scheme of things it's not as if I'm living
Syria and have bigger fish to fry.
The reason for my buiying the external
500gig drive was to establish a more robust backup regime! But have gone out to buy
another now so I'll have the 2 500gig drive with the files on each in future. Guess I
really should have looked at buying a NAS with dual mirrored drives
|
dmills
Joined: 25/08/06
Posts: 2133
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992094 - 09/06/12 02:41 PM
|
|
|
|
NAS would not have saved you, RAID is about availability not backup!
The point
of backup is that when you accidentally reformat a disk, or erase something critical you
can restore from the backups, the point of RAID is that a disk failure does not force you
to stop working until you can restore from backups....
Regards, Dan.
-------------------- Audiophiles use phono leads because they are unbalanced people!
|
Pete Kaine
Scan Computers
Joined: 10/07/03
Posts: 3212
Loc: Manchester
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: dmills]
#992279 - 11/06/12 10:57 AM
|
|
|
Another free and very, very good tool is http://www.piriform.com/recuva and certainly another one to try.
-------------------- ScanProAudio & 3XS Audio Systems
ScanProAudio Blog
|
OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1597
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: Pete Kaine]
#992314 - 11/06/12 01:09 PM
|
|
|
Quote Pete Kaine:
Another free
and very, very good tool is http://www.piriform.com/recuva and certainly another one to try.
Thanks, I used Recuva, and I
have managed to get back about 50% of the content, and 25% of that 50% is the ones I
wanted back most.
For the rest the folder structure was over written so yes the
files are there, but with so many associated files it is hard to know which files go in
which folders.
The other files I can't get back are I kept a folder of all
drivers I use on each of my PCs, so they are easy enough to get back. But what I did lose
is all my incremental images for each of 3 machines so I
might as well use the opportunity to upgrade all to Win7 and start with a blank canvas.
If anyone is interested, the free version of Acronis that they gave away some
years ago now on a magazine, Acronis10, still works, even with Win7/64bit :-) Just be
careful where yuo recover to
|
Pete Kaine
Scan Computers
Joined: 10/07/03
Posts: 3212
Loc: Manchester
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992429 - 12/06/12 08:46 AM
|
|
|
Quote OneWorld:
If anyone
is interested, the free version of Acronis that they gave away some years ago now on a
magazine, Acronis10, still works, even with Win7/64bit :-) Just be careful where yuo
recover to
Many years ago I
did the same sort of thing where I had two drives in a machine, one being the OS drive in
need of a clean install and the second being full of work and projects. I restored my OS
drive image but hit the wrong target drive and took out the project one by mistake.
Not to worry I thought, I have a back up... which when I tried to restore it I
realised that image I had was corrupted as the drive was failing.
Cue sound of
harddrive bouncing off the wall.
Two lessons learnt that day :
Check your images occasionally to make sure they are working correctly. Always
remove/disconnect any drive from a machine that isn't the clone or master in a backup
restore routine.
-------------------- ScanProAudio & 3XS Audio Systems
ScanProAudio Blog
|
OneWorld
Joined: 07/04/09
Posts: 1597
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: Pete Kaine]
#992606 - 13/06/12 10:14 AM
|
|
|
Quote Pete Kaine:
Quote OneWorld:
If anyone
is interested, the free version of Acronis that they gave away some years ago now on a
magazine, Acronis10, still works, even with Win7/64bit :-) Just be careful where yuo
recover to
Many years ago I
did the same sort of thing where I had two drives in a machine, one being the OS drive in
need of a clean install and the second being full of work and projects. I restored my OS
drive image but hit the wrong target drive and took out the project one by mistake.
Not to worry I thought, I have a back up... which when I tried to restore it I
realised that image I had was corrupted as the drive was failing.
Cue sound of
harddrive bouncing off the wall.
Two lessons learnt that day :
Check your images occasionally to make sure they are working correctly. Always
remove/disconnect any drive from a machine that isn't the clone or master in a backup
restore routine.
As it
happens, I too have a similar sort of setup, where I have a PC with slide in/out caddies,
so I can try out various operating systems and hardware setups. And just out of curiosity
I tried to recover an image yesterday before I added new hardware and then I would make
new image with the new hardware added.
Result - Image Corrupted! Goodness knows
how, the machine has been stable, images on a separate HDD, PC not connected to internet
etc. I do have backups of that machine fortunately.
Is the built Win7 imaging
software reliable?
I also tried DriveXML in the past and on recovering, the
boot drive report cannot find NTOS kernel, or words to that effect, whatever, it wouldn't
boot
Am trying out Macrium Reflect
|
mick.n
Joined: 01/09/04
Posts: 358
|
Re: "Oh please no, don't do this to me" The Dangers of TrueImage
[Re: OneWorld]
#992652 - 13/06/12 01:37 PM
|
|
|
Quote OneWorld:
Am trying
out Macrium Reflect
I
switched to Macrium reflect about 6 weeks ago after using true image for years. Having
been let down by Acronis numerous times in the past, i still went back to it like a
devoted masochist. 
The final straw was when my router packed in & windows 7 wouldnt work with my
modem......i loaded my xp image untill the new router arrived. When i tried to reload my
win 7 image the bloody thing refused to boot with various error messages. Had to do a
reinstall.
Reflect, after a few weeks testing etc,seems more reliable so i
bought it after evaluating the trial version. I use the "Win PE" thing that is also
usefull.
|