synder wrote: 21 Nov 2022, 14:05
Hello, thanx in advance for the help that you always give in this forum-
I have a Packard Bell Carbon external HD which suddenly refused to be accessible showing the "H: is not accessible. The Parameter is incorrect"
In two different pc's in windows disk management shows it as RAW and without a label, but i began to be hopeful since in Testdisk sees it as NTFS and also remembers the label i wrote on it ( *KITTYNI*) ; i only did a quick search since it immediately sees it as NTFS and with the correct label so i wrote the correct filesystem but when i restart the PC nothing changes.
Seeing a partition does not justify writing a partition table referring to it. Your task is to look inside using the p-key ("list files") to make sure it contains the desired content. More advanced users take size and position on disk into account when being faced with a couple of partitions.
I didn't do the deeper search
The deeper search is not necessary if you find what you were looking for before. If you had seen your content when looking into the partition you could have already started copying it to a healthy disk.
Checking smart attributes as described here
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=10910
helps deciding if duplicating the drive appears necessary. Duplicating a drive means conserving the dammage level of the source at best because a dammaged drive could degrade upon use. Duplicating the (physically) healthy copy enables you to play around without fear of loosing data.
and now i am doing a chckdsk and i am stuck at an elapsed time of 999 and more hours to wait....seems everything is lost
can you give me some advice on how to use surely in a more skillfull way testdisk to regain my files root and folders? i really hope so because i have family pics that i cannot find elsewhere as well as really important documents and i am really in anxiety. i also did SFC/scannow and it did not revealed any anomaly....even though, the disk is still unaccessible. I attach some screenshots with almost every operation i did in hope that you can help!
Thanx again!
Unfortunately I can't forecast how long chkdsk will take nor if interrupting chkdsk with your parameters creates an additional risk.
Given the importance of your content you might consider biting the bullet and contact a professional recovery lab.