install w/7 on ssd, booted up, existing drive came back as RAW


  1. Posts : 13
    Windows 7 Professional 64 bit os service pack 1
       #1

    install w/7 on ssd, booted up, existing drive came back as RAW


    I installed windows 7 on a new SSD = (SanDisk Ultra II 480GB SATA III 2.5-Inch).

    I then plugged in the 2 other hard drives and booted the pc.

    I saw the SSD C: and one of the previous internal drives but the 2nd internal drive was jacked.

    The pc recognized it as a drive but without any drive space for storage. see pic below

    I looked in "Manage" and it indicates the lost drive F: is RAW.
    But the RAW drive has 6 other partitions on it so that tells me it was a boot drive. see pic below

    I want to know how to get that drive recognized again so I can regain access to the valuable data on it.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails install w/7 on ssd, booted up, existing drive came back as RAW-jacked-drive-f.png   install w/7 on ssd, booted up, existing drive came back as RAW-manage.png   install w/7 on ssd, booted up, existing drive came back as RAW-machine-specs.png  
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 13
    Windows 7 Professional 64 bit os service pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #2

    Hello? Anyone?
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 7,055
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit
       #3

    To me it appears that this was your original Lenovo boot drive. If I remember correct, when Lenovo boot drive is connected as a secondary drive it presents this sort of strange partition structure with many recovery partitions.

    Please try this. Plug out all other drives and restore the original boot drive as it was before. When the system boots as before copy all data you would like to retain to another external drive.

    Once you make sure you no longer need any data from it, go back to your present setup and wipe this erstwhile boot drive clean and format it.

    ( I am assuming that your current Windows 7 install on the SSD is legitimate and activated and you no longer require the OEM installation on the old boot drive. I would desist any attempt to unRAW that partition in the current setup in any other manner, if you need data on it.).
    Last edited by jumanji; 13 Dec 2015 at 13:04.
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  4. Posts : 13
    Windows 7 Professional 64 bit os service pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Thanks Jumanji. That sounds very reasonable, I will give it a try and let you know.

    Best,
    Moseley
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 13
    Windows 7 Professional 64 bit os service pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Well Jumanji,

    First I unplugged F: Drive and booted win-7 just to make sure I knew which SATA was F: ( I was satisfied when F: did not show up in (MY Computer) after the boot.

    I then powered down, plugged in the SATA connector on the F: drive and disconnected the SATA connector from the SSD. During boot-up I entered the BIOS and made the following changes: SATA MODE = (IDE) and BOOT MODE = (Auto). Save & Exit.

    The OS did not boot as it was not found: "OS missing hit any key to continue"

    I then repeated the boot process but in BIOS I changed Boot Mode to (Legacy) Still a no go. "OS missing hit any key to continue"

    I am stumped, if there is good data on the RAW partition I should be able to see it.....Just not sure how.

    Thanks Jumanji, it was a good idea and quite frankly, I'm surprised it did not work.

    Best,
    Moseley
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 2,752
    Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
       #6

    Well, I don't purport to know anything firsthand about GPT setups and super-large drives and partitions.

    But I certainly would have expected to see "active" for one partition on your SSD (almost certainly in the small 100MB "EFI system partition"), which presumably you had set to be the first hard drive in the boot sequence of the BIOS. I don't see any "active" partition in your picture.

    Also, that other drive with the seven partitions... as was suggested this presumably was your original Lenovo hard drive but it's got seven PRIMARY partitions (which requires GPT partitioning), and again none of them is "active" either. I don't know what all of these partitions contain... do you? Presumably you knew what was on this drive before you started this SSD project.

    If this had been your OS boot drive originally, I would again have expected to see an "active" partition perhaps just residually. So whatever you did when installing Win7 onto the SSD must have included some steps to un-mark "active" if there had been such a boot partition originally.

    Anyway, if EFI and GPT and all of this "new stuff" has somehow eliminated the need for an "active" partition on the first hard drive shown in the BIOS boot sequence list, I'm not aware of it. I would expect that the need for an "active" partition on that drive still exists, so that the BIOS can go there to find Boot Manager and begin the boot process. At least that's how things work in Win7, which I'm quite familiar with (although ignorant on firsthand knowledge about GPT and EFI, as I've never worked with machines involving them).
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 13
    Windows 7 Professional 64 bit os service pack 1
    Thread Starter
       #7

    I am not an expert or Admin either. I do know that all of these drives are GPT and All of the drives say "Primary".

    Original setup:
    The Lenovo drive's were setup with the multiple partitions as they provided the user a plethora of options that needed to be set during the first boot out of the box. They were or are also big on providing multiple ways to recover from a software fault. The key word is "drive's". I wish I knew for sure but I suspect the drive's were setup in tandem meaning they relied on each-other to complete the boot-up process.

    Anyway:
    Last night I surrendered to my curiosity about software data recovery. I found a software program "M3 software" who has a couple of programs that are suppose to work on RAW and or Formatted drives to rebuild them and recover lost data.

    For a mere $70 I bought into the notion that a RAW drive could be fixed by their "M3 RAW Drive Recovery" program. The program claimed to be able to slip the NTFS file system onto a RAW drive without disturbing the files. Well, that program chewed on the drive for a couple of hours and then spit it back up advising me that I needed to try their other program.

    "M3 Data Recovery" worked on the drive for several hours and when it had completed its work. Walla! The program exclaimed that it had recovered all the files!

    I would say there were at-least 3000 folders (names I did not recognize). I drilled down into every one of them. I spent about 2 hours discovering NOT ONE file had been recovered.

    Fool me once, shame on you. But as Mick Jagger would say, "We won't be fooled again".

    I will leave this post out here for a week or two just to see if anyone can unravel this conundrum all wrapped up in a enigma that looks like a riddle. Then I will put it to bed and just format the D%$%M! thing.

    Thank You for your assistance,
    Moseley
      My Computer


 

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