lolo799 wrote on 2023-03-06, 14:15:
You can use Testdisk with disk images.
Ah, you know I figured it could but I didn't see any options to have it use an image. I just tried dragging and dropping the .img file onto testdisk_win.exe and that actually works. I did the same with photorec and to my amazement it actually recovered a word document (with formatting) that otherwise wasn't available as well as a single zip file containing a Voodoo 3 tweaking program (that should put the age of this stuff into context!).
So that was really cool to see. I'm honestly astonished that it recovered a .zip file without corruption. Sadly, the couple of files (zip and exe) that seemed like they could be related to what I'm looking for just don't seem to be recoverable, but... it was worth a try anyway!
Also worth mentioning... it turns out my backup LS-120 drive (apparently I only had one) was actually bad and does not read any floppy or LS-120 disks no matter what I do. So, there's no chance of recovering more with a different drive at this time. It's interesting to think that I actually just did all this work and imaged the disk using almost the exact same setup that the disks originally came with and were formatted on. Same Gateway PC, original motherboard, CPU, PSU, hard drive, sound\video, LS-120 drive, everything. Only real difference is 98SE rather than 98 first edition, and maybe more RAM.
Anyway, if anyone has to do something like this in the future, here is a summary of my findings:
*Create a disk image somehow. I found GetDataBack to work well in Windows 98SE and it worked okay with LS-120 disks.
*Running testdisk on another (faster) system using the disk image yielded no usable files but it did show real file names with the right settings where GDB always had them slightly cut off.
*Running Photorec (included with testdisk) did actually yield some usable files, but the results changed a lot depending on the settings I chose. For some reason, the zip that was recovered would only open in 7zip and would not open in File Explorer.
Also... as a side note, using one method I did end up with a zip file that was ~75MB and when I opened it with 7zip it had a single small file in it (an NES game ROM of all things). I was curious about what else was contained in the file so I looked around a bit and actually found a simple zip file recovery program that worked! It appears that the data in the zip was just a conglomeration of data from elsewhere on the disk (75MB is basically the entire contents of the disk), but it did still contain that NES ROM which was not accessible anywhere else. So, if you're dealing with a zip or self extracting exe that won't open, give Zip2Fix a try. I was surprised that it did anything. When I tried to fix the two files (zip and exe) that I was hoping would work, the one had zero files recovered and the other was basically just filled with files on the drive. So in that way, Zip2Fix really helped me to be 100% sure the data was gone by saying "see, this is what is actually inside this zip file even if you can recover it."
Since it's tiny, I have attached Zip2Fix to this post, just in case it ever disappears from the internet.