RAID Recovery

RAID Recovery Made Easy

Raid Recovery offers home and office users an affordable and easily usable way to recover lost data and repaid damaged RAID arrays of various types.

Automated RAID Recovery

Major players in the PC hardware market have flooded the market with RAID-enabled motherboards, encouraging unsuspecting computer users to employ RAID configurations at home. While being arguably the cheapest way to increase disk subsystem performance, RAIDs in stripe configurations are inherently less reliable than a single disk. In fact, they are much less reliable then they are faster compared to a single-disk system. The more disks one adds to an array, the less performance benefit one is able to obtain, but the more dangerously unreliable the entire system becomes.

Sooner or later, homegrown multi-disk configurations fail. It can be a consumer-grade RAID controller not coping with the load, or a virus corrupting system structures of the RAID disk, or a failed motherboard, or simply a computer upgrade that brings an incompatible RAID controller into the game. Whatever the reason, one needs a data recovery tool NOW to extract files and data that was stored on the array.

Raid Recovery by First NTFS Recovery http://ntfs-recovery.com/ enables home users to repair and reconstruct damaged RAID arrays no matter whether the original RAID controller is present in the system. Featuring fully automated operation and supplying state-of-the art data recovery algorithms combined with easily usable, step-by-step user interface, Raid Recovery is safe for home use. The available manual mode that allows professionals changing any setting or assembling the RAID by dragging and dropping disk icons makes Raid Recovery the perfect choice for system administrations and data recovery specialists.

Raid Recovery supports all types of mirror, stripe, and hybrid RAID arrays, including RAID 0, 1, JBOD, RAID 5, and 0+1. Supporting hardware and software-based RAIDS, Raid Recovery recognizes arrays produced by many dedicated RAID controllers and all RAID-enabled motherboards manufactured by Intel, NVIDIA, and VIA. Microsoft Dynamic Disks are also supported.

System requirements include a compatible version of Windows. No RAID controller is needed for Raid Recovery to operate. Supported are all versions of Windows from Windows 95 to Windows Vista and 2008 Server. All versions of FAT and NTFS are supported, including FAT16, FAT32, EXT2, EXT3, NTFS, NTFS 4, and NTFS 5.

Free trial version of Raid Recovery with Live Preview is available at http://ntfs-recovery.com/

RAID Recovery Articles

Recovering RAID Arrays at Home: The Easy Way

Automated RAID Recovery

Rescuing Data after RAID Failure

What to Do If Your RAID Controller Fails

How to Use Power Search in RAID Recovery

How to Create RAID Data Recovery Disk with RAID Recovery.

How to backup the RAID with RAID Recovery.

Recover RAID-0 with RAID Recovery.

Recover RAID-1 with RAID Recovery.

Recover RAID-0+1 and RAID-10 with RAID Recovery.

Recover RAID-5 with RAID Recovery.

Recover RAID-1E with RAID Recovery.

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