Partitioning hard drive is actually a format of hard
drive. It divides your hard drive into several physical space. All the
information of partitions are stored on the partition table. But sometimes, the
partitions may cannot be detected or read.
What are the conditions for the partition can be
detected?
In normal condition, the partition can be found in the
partition tables and the partition boot sector is safe.
Why the hard drive
partition cannot be detected?
If You have multiple windows operating system on your
computer. If you partitioning your hard drive in Win 7, but you are running a
Win 8 OS. So, if you have multiple system on your PC, and do not boot from the
right system, some of the hard drive partitions may cannot be detected.
The partitions cannot be detected if they are
accidentally deleted or have damaged. Here are some reasons for an underacted
partition.
1.
MBR damage in partition table. MBR, short for Main Boot
Record.
2.
The primary volume’s boot sector may has been damaged
3.
Partition chain corruption
4.
Improper partition of your hard drive]
Hard drive is
detected but inaccessible?
There are many causes for this situation:
1.
Virus infection, Trojan horse,malware on your computer
2.
Overuse of system lead to bad sectors on hard drive
3.
OS malfunction and software conflicts on your computer
4.
MBR corruption
How to recover the hard drive
partitions which are not available?
Partition is lost from partition table corruption or boot
sector damage can easily be recovered.
Recover your lost
partition with Hdata recovery
software
Hdata recovery software can recover lost files from hard
drive of both desktop and laptop. It can be run on all kinds of Window
operating system. You can use it to help you recover lost or deleted files from
hard drive, formatted hard drive or crashed hard drive.
Simple steps to
recover data from a hard drive cannot be detected or access
1.
Download Hdata recovery software from the website: https://www.hdatarecovery.com/download
2.
Run and choose a appropriate mode to scan your hard
drive.
3.
Scan and preview the results.
4.
Choose a recovery path to store your data.
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