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muchspl2
03-10-2004, 12:51 AM
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14597

Unused space on hard drives recovered?

Updated Hidden partitions revealed


By INQUIRER staff ([email protected]): Tuesday 09 March 2004, 14:33


READER WILEY SILER has sent us a method which he said was discovered by Scott Komblue and documented by himself which they claim can recover unused areas of the hard drive in the form of hidden partitions. We haven't tried this here at the INQUIRER, and would caution readers that messing with your hard drive is done at your own peril and very likely breaches your warranty. Here is what Wiley and Scott did. µ

* UPDATE Does this work? We're not going to try it on our own machine thank you very much. Instead, we're waiting for a call from a hard drive company so we can get its take on these claims.

** UPDATE II A representative for large hard drive distributor Bell Micro said: "This is NOT undocumented and we have done this in the past to load an image of the original installation of the software. When the client corrupted the o/s we had a boot floppy thatopened the unseen partition and copied it to the active or seen partition. It is a not a new feature or discovery. We use it ourselves without any qualms".

Required items
Ghost 2003 Build 2003.775 (Be sure not to allow patching of this software) 2 X Hard Drives (OS must be installed on both.) For sake of clarity we will call the drive we are trying to expand (T) in this document (means Target for partition recover). The drive you use every day, I assume you have one that you want to keep as mater with your current OS and data, will be the last dive we install in this process and will be called (X) as it is your original drive.

1. Install the HDD you wish to recover the hidden partitions (hard drive T) on as the master drive in your system with a second drive as a slave (you can use Hard Drive X if you want to). Any drive will do as a slave since we will not be writing data to it. However, Ghost must see a second drive in order to complete the following steps. Also, be sure hard drive T has an OS installed on it You must ensure that the file system type is the same on both drive (NTFS to NTFS or FAT32 to FAT32, etc)

2. Install Ghost 2003 build 2003.775 to hard drive T with standard settings. Reboot if required.

3. Open Ghost and select Ghost Basic. Select Backup from the shown list of options. Select C:\ (this is the drive we want to free partition on on hard drive T) as our source for the backup. Select our second drive as the target. (no data will be written so worry not). Use any name when requested as it will not matter. Press OK, Continue, or Next until you are asked to reboot.

Critical step
4. Once reboot begins, you must shutdown the PC prior to the loading of DOS or any drivers. The best method is to power down the PC manually the moment you see the BIOS load and your HDDs show as detected.

5. Now that you have shutdown prior to allowing Ghost to do its backup, you must remove the HDD we are attempting to expand (hard drive T which we had installed as master) and replace it with a drive that has an OS installed on it. (This is where having hard drive X is useful. You can use your old hard drive to complete the process.) Place hard drive T as a secondary drive in the system. Hard drive X should now be the master and you should be able to boot into the OS on it. The best method for this assuming you need to keep data from and old drive is:

Once you boot into the OS, you will see that the second drive in the system is the one we are attempting to expand (hard drive T). Go to Computer Management -> Disk Management

You should see an 8 meg partition labeled VPSGHBOOT or similar on the slave HDD (hard drive T) along with a large section of unallocated space that did not show before. DO NOT DELETE VPSGHBOOT yet.

6. Select the unallocated space on our drive T and create a new primary or extended partition. Select the file system type you prefer and format with quick format (if available). Once formatting completes, you can delete the VPSGHBOOT partition from the drive.

7. Here is what you should now see on your T drive.

a. Original partition from when the drive still had hidden partitions
b. New partition of space we just recovered.
c. 8 meg unallocated partitions.

8. Do you want to place drive T back in a PC and run it as the primary HDD? Go to Disk Management and set the original partition on T (not the new one we just formatted) to and Active Partition. It should be bootable again if no data corruption has occurred.

Caution
Do not try to delete both partitions on the drive so you can create one large partition. This will not work. You have to leave the two partitions separate in order to use them. Windows disk management will have erroneous data in that it will say drive size = manus stated drive size and then available size will equal ALL the available space with recovered partitions included.

This process can cause a loss of data on the drive that is having its partitions recovered so it is best to make sure the HDD you use is not your current working HDD that has important data. If you do this on your everyday drive and not a new drive with just junk on it, you do so at your own risk. It has worked completely fine with no loss before and it has also lost the data on the drive before. Since the idea is to yield a huge storage drive, it should not matter.

Interesting results to date:
Western Digital 200GB SATA
Yield after recovery: 510GB of space

IBM Deskstar 80GB EIDE
Yield after recovery: 150GB of space

Maxtor 40GB EIDE
Yield after recovery: 80GB

Seagate 20GB EIDE
Yield after recovery: 30GB

Unknown laptop 80GB HDD
Yield: 120GB

tesco
03-10-2004, 01:05 AM
hmm pretty confusing instructions, somebody should try this, the biggest loss is time.

Cygnuz-Y
03-10-2004, 01:08 AM
it cant be...

:frusty:

Can someone with enough time try this...

DarthInsinuate
03-10-2004, 01:16 AM
in your extract you missed out an update, which links to a letters page http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14608

interesting reading for anyone with time/hard drive to waste

RGX
03-10-2004, 01:20 AM
Why? What is the purpose of these hidden sectors? Why have double the space built into the hard drive then hide it from your customers? :blink:

If it works, boy am I in.

muchspl2
03-10-2004, 01:35 AM
:rolleyes: yea company's would never lie to the consumers

Evil Gemini
03-10-2004, 01:49 AM
Originally posted by RGX@10 March 2004 - 02:20
Why? What is the purpose of these hidden sectors? Why have double the space built into the hard drive then hide it from your customers? :blink:

If it works, boy am I in.
Maybe when a new hdd comes out, its the same old one and they have just unlocked more space on it <_<

Wouldnt suprise me.

Wankers :lol:

Would this work with an old 8gb ?

bigdawgfoxx
03-10-2004, 01:52 AM
250 to 510...damnnn haha

tesco
03-10-2004, 01:57 AM
Originally posted by Evil Gemini@9 March 2004 - 20:49
Would this work with an old 8gb ?
it apparently works with any hard drive...but a 8gb gain is barely anything anyway.

scottwile
03-10-2004, 02:29 AM
that is crazy, i&#39;m interested to hear more input on this subject. this seems to good to be true
B)

Triadcool
03-10-2004, 02:44 AM
I dont have another hard drive to try this, but im intrested on hearing about peoples experiences that have tried it.

DarkClown12
03-10-2004, 02:58 AM
i will try it what do i need?

muchspl2
03-10-2004, 03:03 AM
http://hardforum.com/showthread.php?thread...15&pagenumber=1 (http://hardforum.com/showthread.php?threadid=739701&perpage=15&pagenumber=1) looks like it doesn&#39;t work

Keikan
03-10-2004, 03:38 AM
Smells like shit. Bullshit&#33;

firefox
03-10-2004, 04:48 AM
yeah right, and I have some beach front property in arizona for sale

SingaBoiy
03-10-2004, 05:01 AM
I dont feel like reading the 6 pages but i have a 20 gig Samsung that ill try it on in alittle bit after my games finish.

SingaBoiy
03-10-2004, 08:29 AM
Ok im ready to start... does anyone know where i can d/l Ghost 2003 Build 2003.775 ? And should i start with a recently formatted hdd?

Evil Gemini
03-10-2004, 09:33 AM
The 120GB hard drive you purchased may have been physically identical to a 250GB hard drive, but simply it only passed qualification at 120GB

muchspl2
03-10-2004, 09:37 AM
looks bad
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by stevieg
Yes it doesnt work.

first. it seems that what happens is ghost creates that second fake partition from the free space on the main partition. so what happens is you have 2 partitions occupying the same physical space on the drive.

I tested it this way, maxtor 30gb drive with 15gb free, found a 17gb partition.

copied 10gb of data to new partition was still able to access both partitions fine, added another 6gb to the new partition to a total of 16gb (free space on old partition was only 15gb) this is where the main partition became corrupted, couldnt even open it through windows explorer.

okies so i thought well maybe it was just a corrupted file system, formatted the main partition leaving the 17gb partition alone. Everything worked fine. copied 10gb to the main partition and it still worked fine (still within the 28gb physical size of the drive) was able to access both partitions fine. copied another 10gb data to large partition and it copied fine but now the 17gb partition corrupted.

So what it looks like was happening was everything was fine and it "looked" like you did have an oversize drive until you tried to put more data than the physical drive&#39;s spec&#39;s are. couldnt handle it because it was in essence only lying about the size of the partitions and ended up overwriting each other.


:/

zapjb
03-10-2004, 10:09 AM
From iexbeta::daedelus::

doublespace is old from DOS, and it&#39;s a form of hard disk COMPRESSION. it doesn&#39;t gain extra space through weird methods like this. and if COMPRESSION is what you are after just use the built in compression of NT/2000/XP, it&#39;s much better than using old shit doublepsace/drivespace. When you format a drive just tick to enable compression.

EDIT: hell&#33; i don&#39;t even think XP would support running on a hard disk drive with doublespace, it old, it&#39;s DOS, and it&#39;s FAT32. keep away from it, it&#39;s fucked, doublespace has never been a popular option. jesus the only time I ever used it was in the day where I only had a 40MB HDD



The above is not from my "pen". All props to the true author as noted.

clocker
03-10-2004, 12:25 PM
Originally posted by firefox@9 March 2004 - 20:48
yeah right, and I have some beach front property in arizona for sale
Really?

I am interested.
Is the surfing good?

gungrave
03-10-2004, 01:25 PM
i have 2 80gb hard drives and they both say 76gb or some thing like that.
i dont realy care where the other 4gb (7gb) are lol :P
172GB will do me fine since i got over 80 GB free after formating the main hard drive.
but when i get my net i will probley end up posting on hardwareworld asking for a place to get cheep CDS from to put films on :P

reTARPD
03-10-2004, 04:01 PM
i have a maxtor 40GB w00tish

i thought maybe it was a sortof OEM job where all HDDs are 120 then they just hide 80GB cos cos im poor. after reading this i think its bullshit though :blink:

4th gen
03-10-2004, 05:27 PM
Originally posted by bigdawgfoxx@10 March 2004 - 00:52
250 to 510...damnnn haha
I could bloody have that :drool: :drool: :drool:

Neo 721
03-10-2004, 05:42 PM
This appears just to be a marketing blunder down to faulty manufacturing details sounds like somthing that could only randomly work. Whithout reformating about 1.5 times more capacity could be achived through compressing your entire HD, thats with better comp methods.

kaiweiler
03-10-2004, 06:58 PM
I don&#39;t believe it, but it&#39;d be pretty tight if it were true ;)
I don&#39;t see why the manufacturer wouldnt just unlock all the space and sell the drive for more, rather then have the same amount of space, yet waste most of it, doesn&#39;t make sense to me

junkyardking
04-20-2004, 10:39 AM
So this doesnt work :huh:

100%
04-20-2004, 12:41 PM
Pity
but if you ever need to sell your PC
you can say it has "double" the size - according to *

kaiweiler
04-20-2004, 01:10 PM
Originally posted by Zedaxax@20 April 2004 - 08:41
Pity
but if you ever need to sell your PC
you can say it has "double" the size - according to *
why bumb a month and a half old thread with an almost meaningless post?
<_<
the reason threads fall back a few pages is because nobody wants to hear about them anymore ;)

100%
04-20-2004, 06:00 PM
Originally posted by kaiweiler@20 April 2004 - 14:10

why bumb a month and a half old thread with an almost meaningless post?
<_<
the reason threads fall back a few pages is because nobody wants to hear about them anymore ;) [/quote]

Why not check the Dates before me wisedude?

Why not contribute instead of complain?

why bother doing anything at all?

<_<