
It's not only this Win 7 issue, it is also the system volume information being filled with some info from my windows installation. So if there is any data lost/deleted this alone may ruin your chances for a good recovery.

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Thanks for a good advice!coctailrob wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2019 4:41 amI find its best to disable automounting of drives for any machine that is being used for data recovery.
@Alt, does it also happens using Windows 10?Alt wrote: ↑Mon Mar 01, 2010 8:21 amWindows 7 can severely undermine successful data recovery after a quick format by extending an empty MFT file to 256KB and effectively killing the information about 229 records of previously stored user's files. Moreover, it may quietly extend the MFT file to 256KB when a fresh disk formatted by XP or Vista is connected to a Windows 7 system.
More information.
What about Windows 10 NTFS formatted disk after quick format using same Windows 10 NTFS partition? Would be possible to recover 100% files if no file has been written on disk after quick format? Or this is not possible to tell unless testing?
I'm afraid... Sure not 100%. Unfragmented files will be raw, that is, without their names and other attributes. Fragmented files will be either lost or recovered only partially.