Recovering Specific Images
After PC Inspector File Recovery scans bad media, it lists the files it found in a File
Recovery window. You can select a specific image and have PC Inspector File
Recovery copy the image from the corrupt media to a healthy hard drive or disk.
The following steps walk you through the process of selecting and recovering files
from the File Recovery window:
- The File Recovery window should be onscreen. If it isn’t, follow the steps in
the preceding section. The File Recovery window will display three main fold-
ers: Root, Deleted, and Lost. Expand all the folders. You should see a DCIM
directory under Root or Deleted. Continue expanding until files appear. If the
drive is especially corrupt, you might see garbage filenames. These files are
probably history, although something might be salvageable. - Select a file and right-click on it. Only select one file—do not select multiple
files just yet. The right-click menu will appear. Click Save To.
Do not select multiple files in the right window until you ensure that you can
recover one file. If you select multiple files and the software can’t recover one
of them, the software will hang and it will be difficult to close it. A hang is
often worse than a crash because your system slows down so much you can’t
close an application. - In the Select Directory dialog box, select where you want to save the file.
- If the drive was formatted, make sure you select No Fat (Consecutive) in the
drop-down list. Otherwise, it should say FAT 1. If you experience problems,
try FAT 2. - Click OK. The file will appear in the directory.
If no files appear, it’s possible the flash media drive was formatted or a logical drive
wasn’t detected. Return to step 3 and change settings in the Select Drive dialog box,
such as Use FAT and Skip Bad Clusters. If a logical drive wasn’t detected, highlight
the drive and click Find Logical Drives.
Partially Corrupt Files
Images recovered from badly corrupted flash media will occasionally be partially
missing. This happens when newer files have overwritten the image’s data, or
because the recovery software doesn’t know how large the file is. The latter can be
remedied. To determine whether the entire image can be restored, try the following:
- Choose Object, Options, Files. Make sure the Find Lost Files check box is
checked.
102 ABSOLUTE BEGINNER’S GUIDE TODIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY