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How To Recover an Accidentally Deleted NTFS or FAT32 Dynamic VolumeArticle ID: 245725 - View products that this article applies to. This article was previously published under Q245725 NoticeThis article applies to Windows 2000. Support for Windows 2000 ends on July 13, 2010. The Windows 2000 End-of-Support Solution Center
(http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=http%3a%2f%2fsupport.microsoft.com%2fwin2000)
is a starting point for planning your migration strategy from Windows 2000. For more information see the Microsoft Support Lifecycle
Policy
(http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/)
.NoticeThis article applies to Windows 2000. Support for Windows 2000 ends on July 13, 2010. The Windows 2000 End-of-Support Solution Center
(http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=http%3a%2f%2fsupport.microsoft.com%2fwin2000)
is a starting point for planning your migration strategy from Windows 2000. For more information see the Microsoft Support Lifecycle
Policy
(http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/)
.On This PageSUMMARY If a Windows 2000 NTFS or FAT32 dynamic volume is
accidentally deleted by using the Disk Management snap-in, you may be able to
recover the volume and the data contained on it. You can do this only if a new
volume has not been created and formatted in its place. When Disk Management
removes a volume from a dynamic disk, it erases the volume's file-system boot
sector (sector-0 of the volume), and then removes the volume entry from the
Disk Management private region database, leaving the rest of the drive intact
(including the data). Because both NTFS and FAT32 volumes maintain backup boot
sectors, you can recover the volume by restoring the boot sector. NOTES
To recover the deleted volume, use one of the following procedures. To Recover a Deleted NTFS Volume
To Recover a Deleted FAT32 Volume
CAUSEFor additional information,
click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge
Base: 153973
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/153973/EN-US/
)
Recovering NTFS Boot Sector on NTFS Partitions
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