How to Use Ontrack EasyRecovery Home — Step‑by‑Step Tutorial

How to Use Ontrack EasyRecovery Home — Step‑by‑Step Tutorial

What you’ll need

  • A Windows PC or Mac with Ontrack EasyRecovery Home installed.
  • A separate drive to save recovered files (recommended).

1. Install and open the app

  1. Download and run the installer from the official Ontrack site and follow prompts.
  2. Launch EasyRecovery Home and accept any necessary permissions.

2. Choose a recovery scenario

  • Select the appropriate option on the main screen (e.g., Deleted File Recovery, Formatted Drive, Lost Partition, or RAID/file system recovery).
  • For general deleted or accidentally lost files, pick “Deleted File Recovery” or “Files & Folders.”

3. Select the drive or device to scan

  • Choose the drive, partition, or external device where the files were lost.
  • If you don’t see the device, ensure it’s connected and recognized by your OS.

4. Configure scan type

  • Quick Scan: faster, finds recently deleted files.
  • Deep Scan: slower, searches the whole volume and file signatures — use when Quick Scan fails.
  • Check or toggle any file-type filters if you only need specific types (documents, photos, video, etc.).

5. Run the scan

  • Start the scan and wait. Deep Scans can take from minutes to hours depending on size.
  • You can usually preview files during or after the scan.

6. Preview results

  • Browse scan results by folder, file type, or a reconstructed folder tree.
  • Use the built-in preview to verify files (images, documents, some video formats).

7. Select files to recover

  • Mark the files/folders you want to restore.
  • Avoid selecting everything blindly — prioritize the most important items.

8. Recover to a safe location

  • Click Recover and choose a different drive than the source (external USB or another internal drive) to avoid overwriting.
  • Confirm and begin recovery. Monitor progress and verify recovered files when finished.

9. If recovery fails

  • Try re-running a Deep Scan if initially used Quick Scan.
  • Use file-type-specific filters or signature scanning if available.
  • Consider creating a disk image first and running recovery on the image to prevent further damage.

10. After recovery

  • Verify recovered files open correctly.
  • Back up important files to a separate drive or cloud storage.
  • If hardware failure is suspected, stop using the drive and consult a professional data‑recovery service.

Notes and tips

  • Stop using the affected drive immediately after data loss to maximize recovery chances.
  • Always recover to a different target drive.
  • Keep expectations realistic: overwritten or physically damaged data may be unrecoverable.

If you’d like, I can produce a concise checklist you can print and follow during a recovery session.

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