christubef
New member
Hello,
sorry for my english, i'm french,
one night this week I was sounding a jazz concert with my LS9 digital mixer and at the same time I was recording the concert in "direct OUT" and multitrack with my multitrack Tascam MX 2424 connected in adat. to make a new mix of the concert later.
But there was a blackout during the concert just a little before the end while the MW 2424 was in recording mode. No inverter, so mx 2424 sees no trace of what had been recorded.
so I stop using the hard drive that is in the mx2424 waiting to go home, once at home, I put the hard drive mx2424 on my computer to see a little what there inside: and so, I see my Wav files corresponding to each track but these are illegible, nor copiable on another retrieval. it is even indicated 0 byte on these wav nor any information on the properties of these file wav (sampling frequency quaniacetion etc). I know that every time I stop a recording on the mx2424, it must write information on the index of the disk partition, update its info files of the current project, and finalize the wav file, so if we suddenly cut the power, the machine does not have time to write this data and so at the next restart it does not know that there is new wav file. Yet I know that the data is written on the disc and my question and how to find them ??
to try, I took another hard drive that I put in the mx2424, I run a record and turn off the power to generate the same file failure on another disc story to tinker first on a disc of test in case I make a false manipulation that would actually lose me the data (you never know)
I tried "easy recovery pro": he found nothing, I launched a CMD chkdsk command that did not find anything, I also did an analysis with "recuva" which finds the files but also at 0 bytes therefore unusable ...
I do not know what to do, i need a softwar it "search" the entire disk without requiere to the indexes of the disk, or create a file that allows the data corresponding to these wav files to be located.
I want to have the help of computer scientists.
Thank for your help,
CHris
sorry for my english, i'm french,
one night this week I was sounding a jazz concert with my LS9 digital mixer and at the same time I was recording the concert in "direct OUT" and multitrack with my multitrack Tascam MX 2424 connected in adat. to make a new mix of the concert later.
But there was a blackout during the concert just a little before the end while the MW 2424 was in recording mode. No inverter, so mx 2424 sees no trace of what had been recorded.
so I stop using the hard drive that is in the mx2424 waiting to go home, once at home, I put the hard drive mx2424 on my computer to see a little what there inside: and so, I see my Wav files corresponding to each track but these are illegible, nor copiable on another retrieval. it is even indicated 0 byte on these wav nor any information on the properties of these file wav (sampling frequency quaniacetion etc). I know that every time I stop a recording on the mx2424, it must write information on the index of the disk partition, update its info files of the current project, and finalize the wav file, so if we suddenly cut the power, the machine does not have time to write this data and so at the next restart it does not know that there is new wav file. Yet I know that the data is written on the disc and my question and how to find them ??
to try, I took another hard drive that I put in the mx2424, I run a record and turn off the power to generate the same file failure on another disc story to tinker first on a disc of test in case I make a false manipulation that would actually lose me the data (you never know)
I tried "easy recovery pro": he found nothing, I launched a CMD chkdsk command that did not find anything, I also did an analysis with "recuva" which finds the files but also at 0 bytes therefore unusable ...
I do not know what to do, i need a softwar it "search" the entire disk without requiere to the indexes of the disk, or create a file that allows the data corresponding to these wav files to be located.
I want to have the help of computer scientists.
Thank for your help,
CHris