

Each drive will generate a combo menu for detected partitions. Once the scanning is all completed, mounting lost partitions and creating disk images can ensue. The final method is Thorough Scan, and this one will take the most amount of time for completion, as it looks into every sector of the drive while digging up valid partitions.

It has a small description like all three methods do, but there is no explanation for why it's "intellectual." The Normal Scan follows up, and this scanning type appears to check all areas of the disk where standard partitioning tools are allowed to place the beginning of a partition. The recommended one is called Intellectual Scan. A scan must be run on each drive to figure out if they have any lost partitions. The list contains only their names, and sizes. No distinction is made between HDDs and SDDs. Scanning typesįind is the first part of the business, so when the app is run, all existing drives will be identified. Partition Find and Mount, as the name suggests, is a handy tool that comes to your help in case you've lost a partition or more, no matter the reason. However, the data stored on such partitions is the issue. The partition on itself is not important, as the memory it takes cannot be chopped off, it simply gets reallocated. One can have a partition removed as a result of specific actions like virus infection, power outages, or data corruption.

Deleting a partition is not easy to get done, at least not from inside the File Explorer. Losing partitions is not an event everybody deals with.
