Network Repair 1
Data Recovery
Tips And Suggestions
Data Loss Prevention
And Recovery

Data Loss Prevention
when it is powered on,
when it is powered on,
this will prevent hard
drive crashes.
drive crashes.


Protect your computer
against power surges
with a power surge
protector or better yet,
with an uninterruptible
power supply.

Back up important
data regularly. If your
hard drive fails, you
can restore your data
to a new hard drive.

Turn off your computer
when not in use.
Besides the risk of
power surges, an
earthquake can shake
you computer that
might cause a hard
drive crash.

Avoid operating your
computer in extreme
temperatures or high
humidity.

Install anti-virus
software on your
computer. This will
help protect your
computer from viruses
that might delete your
data.

Install firewall software
to block worms that
might try to delete your
data.

Data Recovery
If your computer will
not power up, reseat
the power cable going
to the hard drive.

If your computer will
not power up, reseat
both ends of the data
cable.

If your computer will
not power up, try
plugging the data
cable into the
secondary controller.

If you receive the
following error
message “Missing
Operating System”,
check your floppy
drive or CD/DVD drive,
your computer may be
trying to boot from
these drives rather
than your hard drive.

If you hear your hard
drive making very
unusual noises, turn
off the computer
immediately. The noise
is probably due to a
hard drive crash.

Do not run Scandisk to
fix data loss situations,
as this may cause
some of the sectors to
be non-recoverable.

Do not copy or move
any files to the hard
drive containing your
lost data. This may
overwrite the lost data.
Data Recovery
Are you unable to run some of your programs?
Are you unable to start Windows?
Are some of your folders empty that should be full of
files?
Are you unable to access files on a CD, DVD, floppy
disk, flashcard, or memory stick.
If you answered yes to any of these questions, some your data is
probably missing or corrupt.

A data loss situation is usually characterized by the sudden
inability to access data involving a previously functioning
computer system. This may be caused by a virus that deleted
data or reformatted partitions.

If you receive the following error message “Missing Operating
System”, it usually indicates that a virus has infected your master
boot record or partition table. In some cases it may be caused by
a bad CMOS battery that defaulted your BIOS setting.

In some cases, data loss is due to a bad CD, DVD, floppy,
flashcard, memory stick, or a failing hard drive. Most hard drives
will emit a light mechanical hum that a user may notice under
normal operation. An indication of impending failure is when the
normal sound changes to louder ticking or grinding noises. This
symptom may precede actual data access problems as the hard
drive utilizes spare sectors.
Other forms of data loss include accidental deletion of data,
accidental reformatting of partitions, and sabotage.

Network Repair 1 has the tools and knowledge to recover your
data even if the hard drive's partition table, boot record, FAT/MTF,
or root directory is lost or damaged.



Network Repair 1 can restore all file types that was lost due to a
virus attack, a power failure that caused a system crash, files that
were lost due to a software failure, files that were accidentally
deleted, or if the drive was formatted.

Supported file systems:

· FAT 12
· FAT 16
· FAT 32
· NTFS
· UDF

Supported drive types:

· IDE hard disk
· SCSI hard disk
· SATA
· RAID 0 and 5 arrays
· Floppy disk
· CD ROM
· DVD ROM
· Flash card
Call us anytime; we are available to
serve you 24 hours a day,   7 days a
week.
Phone# (805)553-9756
Email:oquiroz@networkrepair1.com