Correct.
Repair tools can fix:
Broken JPEG markers
Corrupt quantization tables
Header inconsistencies
They cannot recreate overwritten scan data.
Given NVMe + TRIM + delay before recovery, this is likely permanent data loss
Yes..after certain offset, large blocks of 00.
So I assume repair software won’t help?
Also worth checking:
Are recovered files full of 00 values after a certain offset? That’s common in TRIM scenarios.
If so, no repair tool can reconstruct missing pixel data.
Not necessarily.
JPEG header (SOI marker + metadata) is stored at beginning of file. If only the first clusters survived, header can look valid while image body (scan data) is gone.
A valid header alone doesn’t mean recoverable image data exists.
Some files show valid JPEG headers when opened in hex editor. Does that improve chances?
Agree with @Silas.
If thumbnails load but full images fail, two possibilities:
Thumbnail cache in Windows (not from recovered file)
Partial header data survived, but image scan data is zero-filled
If large portions are gray or unreadable, that’s consistent with TRIM-cleared sectors.
That timing is important.
On SSDs with TRIM enabled (default in Windows 10/11), deleted blocks are marked and typically cleared by the controller fairly quickly.
If recovery happened hours later, chances are the underlying data pages were already zeroed.
Yes, confirmed internal NVMe SSD.
System had been running normally for a few hours after deletion before recovery attempt.
First thing to confirm: was this definitely an SSD and not HDD?
If SSD + TRIM was active, the actual data blocks may have been wiped shortly after deletion. In that case, recovery tools can reconstruct filenames and folder structure but not actual image content.
Hi Team,
Customer shift-deleted a 12GB photo folder from Desktop (Windows 11, NTFS, internal SSD). They used third-party recovery software and restored the full folder structure.
Problem:
All JPEG files recovered
File sizes look normal
Thumbnails sometimes load
But full images won’t open or show heavy distortion
Customer is asking if the files can be repaired or if this means permanent loss.
Need technical clarity before responding.
We’ve all been there. You plug in your external SSD, the light flashes, you hear the ‘ding’ from Windows… but nothing shows up in File Explorer.
Whether it’s an old Mac-formatted drive you’re trying to read on a PC, or a ‘dead’ partition on your primary backup, the panic is real. I’m opening this thread to crowdsource the best first steps when a drive goes invisible. What’s your ‘secret weapon’ for forcing a drive to show up without formatting it and losing everything?
Hey everyone! I’ve been seeing a lot of “help, I deleted everything” messages in my inbox lately, so I thought it was time to start a dedicated thread. When you’re in a pinch on Windows, what is your absolute go-to recovery tool? Whether it’s a free open-source gem or a paid powerhouse, let’s hear what has actually worked for you when things went sideways.
If you’ve accidentally deleted photos, formatted your SD card, or found it unexpectedly empty, don’t panic. In most cases, your data is still recoverable, but your next steps are critical. Follow these steps carefully to maximize your chances of a full recovery.
Step 1. Stop Using the SD Card Immediately
The moment you realize data is lost:
Why? When files are deleted or the card is formatted, the data remains on the flash memory until overwritten. Continuing to use the card risks permanent data loss.
Step 2. Ensure Physical Integrity
Inspect the card for physical damage. If it’s cracked, water-damaged, or has corrupted sectors (“card not recognized” errors), consider professional recovery services.
Use a reliable card reader connected directly to your computer—avoid USB hubs or cheap adapters that may cause connection issues.
Step 3. Select a Trusted Recovery Tool
For logical recovery (deletion, formatting, corruption), I recommend Stellar Photo Recovery. It’s a tool I often use in non-physical damage cases due to its:
i had an SD card corrupt on me during a wedding. lost everything on my A camera from the pre-ceremony stuff and the entire ceremony. luckily my second shooter was good enough and I somehow still pulled a decent video together… that was a hard lesson learned, now i ALWAYS record with 2 SD’s….
Final recommendation for customer response:
Explain SSD TRIM behavior clearly
Clarify this is not software failure
Advise maintaining backups moving forward
No further write attempts on SSD
Technically, this case falls under physical block clearing, not repairable corruption.