I ran a file and folder count on my dad's to find out the average folder and file count for that much data and found 759082 files and 116946 folders in a total of 876 GB, including about 90 GB of video files, a few video games, a Windows 7 Ultimate 32-bit installation and a Windows 7 Professional "Windows" folder with 58695 files and 10796 folders at 10 GB and a Windows 2000 installation with 4060 files at 200 MB. Are the file count and folder count right compared to how much data would fit there? I had about 900 GB (about 30 GB were unoccupied) worth of files, including but not limited to: dozens of video games (mainly small ones but a few bigger ones, but nothing as big as GTA V for example), at least 350 GB of video files, at least 30 GB of archive files and a Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit installation among other things. This is a screenshot of the results of that scan: Īlso, W10 partition manager shows the 931.41 GB partition as RAW while the 100 MB boot partition seems to be working fine (NTFS) I installed Windows 10 on a 29 GB flash drive, plugged it into the laptop with the (corrupted?) HDD, booted W10 from it and ran a Complete Recovery scan with EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Professional 5.8.5. My 931.51 GB Hard Drive with Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit on it started booting into a blue screen and then shutting down instantly (UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME).
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