Active File Recovery Professional 10.0.6 [repack] [WORKING]

With hard drives now exceeding 18TB, older software often crashes when scanning 4K-native sectors. 10.0.6 has been recompiled with 64-bit address space optimization, allowing it to map drives up to 1 petabyte theoretically (tested stable up to 20TB).

[ Storage Device / Damaged Volume ] | +---------------------+---------------------+ | | [ QuickScan ] [ SuperScan ] Reads MFT / Root Directory Sector-by-Sector Parsing (Seconds to complete) (Hours to complete) | | +---------------------+---------------------+ | [ Active@ Disk Editor ] Inspect Raw Hexadecimal Data | [ File Organizer / Preview ] Verify File Authenticity | [ Recovered to Safe Target ]

Solid-state drives (SSDs) are notoriously hard to recover from due to the TRIM command, which permanently wipes deleted blocks. Version 10.0.6 introduces a predictive algorithm that attempts to reconstruct TRIM-affected data by cross-referencing NTFS log files before the TRIM command executed. While not a miracle worker, it improves success rates on modern drives by roughly 15% compared to version 9. active file recovery professional 10.0.6

: Click Quick Scan for immediate results. If the partition was formatted, click SuperScan , select the file types you want to target, and let the process complete.

Includes a Hex Viewer (Active@ Disk Editor) that allows advanced users to manually inspect raw disk sectors, such as MBR, Boot Sectors, and MFT records. Custom File Signatures: With hard drives now exceeding 18TB, older software

Do not scan the original failing drive. Go to Tools > Create Disk Image . Active File Recovery Professional 10.0.6 allows you to save an image file ( .img or .dd ) on another healthy drive. If the original physically fails during scan, you have a snapshot.

: Click the QuickScan or SuperScan button at the top of the interface. Version 10

If you need a recommendation, let me know what kind of drive and data loss situation you have.

The offered full functionality but typically restricted the maximum file size of the restored data, allowing users to test the software's efficacy on small documents before purchasing.