What happened to my F drive

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lennox

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I had two drives an F and a C drive. Now when I check my computer I only

have a C drive ,what happened to my F drive......









--

lennox
 
lennox wrote:

> I had two drives an F and a C drive. Now when I check my computer I

> only have a C drive ,what happened to my F drive...




What *was* your F drive?

What changed between the time it was there and now?

What is the manufacturer and model of your computer?



--

Shenan Stanley

MS-MVP

--

How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
 
On 25 Feb 2010, lennox wrote in

microsoft.public.windowsxp.general:



> I had two drives an F and a C drive. Now when I check my computer

> I only have a C drive ,what happened to my F drive......




It's removable and is now in your pocket.
 
lennox wrote:

> I had two drives an F and a C drive. Now when I check my computer I only

> have a C drive ,what happened to my F drive......

>




First, it helps to know how many physical drives you actually have.

The things with the letters, like "C:" and "F:" are partitions,

or a portion of a hard drive. A single partition can span the size of

the entire drive, or a drive can be split into multiple partitions

of some size.



--------------

Single drive | C: | F: | single drive, two partitions

--------------



------

Two drives | C: | two separate drives with

------ one partition on each one.

------

| F: |

------

If you go to



Start: Settings: Control Panel: Administrative Tools: Computer Management



and run the Disk Management item, you'll get some kind of picture

of your hard drives and the partitions on them.



If you see what looks like a partition, and there isn't any information

displayed for it, the partition could be damaged and the file system

may no longer be mounting.



If you don't see a partition at all, and you only see "C:" plus

a bunch of empty space, then you're in a bit more trouble.



You really need someone with some knowledge about computers,

to help you out now. Perhaps, if you can describe what you see

in Disk Management, maybe someone can suggest how to find F:.



There are tools you can use, but you have to know a bit about how

disks work, to use a tool like this safely. This one, for example,

can scan a disk, find a lost partition, and build a partition table.

But then, you, as the operator of the program, have to use your

judgment, as to whether what this program comes up with, is correct

or not. And that isn't always an easy thing to determine. This isn't

a "magic bullet", but it is free. On one of my disks here, it found

a partition I removed some time ago, so in some sense, it can be

"too good" at what it does, for all usages. About 50% of the time,

I have to reject the new partition table this program comes up with,

due to issues I may have created myself.



http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk



The thing is, when you work on a disk (expert or otherwise), there

is always a danger of erasing something or making a mistake you'll

later regret. The safest action, is to stop using a computer when

something like this happens, and find local help. A knowledgeable

friend, or a local computer shop. While there may be nice programs

around, that promise to find all your data, you have no way of knowing

what they're about to do.



One thing I advocate, is copying the affected disk, sector by sector,

to a backup disk. That backup disk, is then your copy for safekeeping.

Then, if you make a mistake trying to recover F:, you have something

to fall back on. I learned this the hard way, when I used a tool

written at work, to recover data, and instead, it erased the data.

I've been skeptical of utility writers and their skills, ever since :-(

Backups are your friend, no matter when you decide to do them.

And when a partition is fried, a sector by sector backup is the kind

you want to make, of the entire disk, so you have a copy of the

(damaged) goods.



Paul
 
You should be concerned about your CD drive as well? It is normally a D

drive but it doesn't have to be. Perhaps your F drive was a CD drive and

now something has gone wrong in Upper and Lower filters. See if this

article is of any help:



http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314060



hth



"lennox" wrote in message

news:lennox.5ccd986@pcbanter.net...

>

> I had two drives an F and a C drive. Now when I check my computer I only

> have a C drive ,what happened to my F drive......

>

>

>

>

> --

> lennox
 
Maybe a dingo ate your F drive?



lennox wrote:

> I had two drives an F and a C drive. Now when I check my computer I only

> have a C drive ,what happened to my F drive......
 
]lennox wrote:

I had two separate hard drives C and F there was a reason why it

was called F,but I don't remember .I had this for several years.

Lately I have been having trouble booting up Internet explorer..

Sometimes it won't boot up at all....





First, it helps to know how many physical drives you actually have.

The things with the letters, like "C:" and "F:" are partitions,

or a portion of a hard drive. A single partition can span the size of

the entire drive, or a drive can be split into multiple partitions

of some size.



--------------

Single drive | C: | F: | single drive, two

partitions

--------------



------

Two drives | C: | two separate drives

with

------ one partition on each

one.

------

| F: |

------

If you go to



Start: Settings: Control Panel: Administrative Tools: Computer

Management



and run the Disk Management item, you'll get some kind of picture

of your hard drives and the partitions on them.



If you see what looks like a partition, and there isn't any

information

displayed for it, the partition could be damaged and the file system

may no longer be mounting.



If you don't see a partition at all, and you only see "C:" plus

a bunch of empty space, then you're in a bit more trouble.



You really need someone with some knowledge about computers,

to help you out now. Perhaps, if you can describe what you see

in Disk Management, maybe someone can suggest how to find F:.



There are tools you can use, but you have to know a bit about how

disks work, to use a tool like this safely. This one, for example,

can scan a disk, find a lost partition, and build a partition table.

But then, you, as the operator of the program, have to use your

judgment, as to whether what this program comes up with, is correct

or not. And that isn't always an easy thing to determine. This isn't

a "magic bullet", but it is free. On one of my disks here, it found

a partition I removed some time ago, so in some sense, it can be

"too good" at what it does, for all usages. About 50% of the time,

I have to reject the new partition table this program comes up with,

due to issues I may have created myself.



http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk



The thing is, when you work on a disk (expert or otherwise), there

is always a danger of erasing something or making a mistake you'll

later regret. The safest action, is to stop using a computer when

something like this happens, and find local help. A knowledgeable

friend, or a local computer shop. While there may be nice programs

around, that promise to find all your data, you have no way of knowing

what they're about to do.



One thing I advocate, is copying the affected disk, sector by sector,

to a backup disk. That backup disk, is then your copy for safekeeping.

Then, if you make a mistake trying to recover F:, you have something

to fall back on. I learned this the hard way, when I used a tool

written at work, to recover data, and instead, it erased the data.

I've been skeptical of utility writers and their skills, ever since

:-(

Backups are your friend, no matter when you decide to do them.

And when a partition is fried, a sector by sector backup is the kind

you want to make, of the entire disk, so you have a copy of the

(damaged) goods.



Paul









--

lennox
 
On 26 Feb 2010, "PA Bear [MS MVP]" wrote in

microsoft.public.windowsxp.general:



> Maybe a dingo ate your F drive?




Starring Meryl Streep!
 
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