bellini Posted September 24, 2007 Share Posted September 24, 2007 1) Delete file from C: drive 2) Delete from recycle bin 3) Scan C: drive with Recuva 4) Deleted file not listed Have tried deleting from C, D & G drive. Have tried scanning each drive in turn looking for file. Have tried "find" No joy ... cannot find file. Other files deleted prior install of Recuva are listed, but not the ones I am testing with. Other info ... C and D drives are partitions on drive 0. I also have drive 1, which is configured in a raid o setup with drive 0. Drive G is an external USB connected HD. Comments/suggestions welcome. Ciao Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bellini Posted September 24, 2007 Author Share Posted September 24, 2007 Update .... It would appear that the issue is with files deleted via the recyle bin If I set deletion to delete directly and bypass the recycle bin, Recuva can list and restore them. This applies to all drives. I can find no application running on the system that does any shredding of files deleted from recycle bin, nor see any reason why the normal emtying of recycle bin should prevent Recuva seeing the deleted file. Comments/suggestions welcome. Ciao Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bellini Posted September 25, 2007 Author Share Posted September 25, 2007 Have duplicated issue on another PC ... same problem as original PC. Ciao, Bob Bellini Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest MrRon Posted September 26, 2007 Share Posted September 26, 2007 Windows often renames files when you place them in the Recycle Bin, so, try scanning and filtering by 'Recycle'. This will show you all the files that were in the Recycle bin. Then sort by file type and your files should almost certainly be there. MrRon Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dauge Posted October 13, 2007 Share Posted October 13, 2007 I agree 100%. Even looking in Recycle as one thread suggests it won't be there. Somebody has to get the bugs out of this program for good because there are too many "recover deleted file " utilities out there to bother with this when you can't find that critical file you need. thx Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest MrRon Posted October 15, 2007 Share Posted October 15, 2007 Are you creating the test files and then deleting them immediately? If so then this is probably the reason you are unable to find them. Windows is constanly creating new files (mostly temps files). When it creates a new file, it adds the file name to the MFT table and uses the space created by the most recently deleted file. So if you create a file and then immediately delete it, the chance of it being recovered are smaller than if you have waited a few minutes. Effectively, the longer a file has existed, the greater the chance of recovering its name. On the other hand, the longer it has been deleted, the greater the chance it has been over written. MrRon Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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