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So I got myself into this situation.
I have a Bitcoin core wallet, which was up to date and all the way synced. Two days ago I tried to start it up again but when I tried to shut my laptop down I had a notification that I had no more free disc space, so Bitcoin core automatically shutted down. The day after I started my laptop again and the program was gone from my start task bar and had to go search it manually in program files. To my surprise when I opened my wallet it had to restart synchronizing all the way back from the start again. Not only that, all of my database directory was gone from the %appdata%\bitcoin folder! It started everything back from the beginning.
Of course I couldn't as I had no more free disk space. Now the strange thing is, all that space on my Hard drive went to the bitcoin database directory. But if my files are gone, and I still have no free disk space then where are they now, are they stored some place alse or hidden? Or did my hard drive crashed? If they where permanently gone I should have had free disk space again.
How can I solve this and recover my bitcoins? Please help, I'm freaking out as I'm afraid I won't be able to recover them any more as all my dat.files are gone!
Do you have your
wallet.datfile still? – Scott – 2017-11-05T20:47:52.4701No, I'm afraid I don't. I know it's very dumb of me, I recently moved my btc from wallet and forgot to do it for this one now. I'm hoping to recover it somehow as my hard drive still has the database files I guess as it's still full. – Axiom90 – 2017-11-05T21:03:30.020
2Immediately, make a full image back up of the hard drive (not a file by file backup, but a backup of every sector) and do not make any modifications to any data on that hard drive until you have done so. If the file was deleted by not overwritten, everything you do increases the risk that the private keys will be overwritten. You need to be able to get back to where you are now before you make any changes to the data on the drive! This is absolutely vital. – David Schwartz – 2017-11-05T21:08:01.357
What do you mean by "I recently moved my btc from wallet and forgot to do it for this one now". You need to listen to David and immediately stop using that hard drive if you have any chance of recovering a deleted but not overwritten
wallet.datfile. – Scott – 2017-11-05T23:01:23.1101I'm not touching it, it's turned off as I'm afraid to do anything wrong. What I mean is I made a transaction from one wallet to this one I made now to save disk space on my laptop I daily use. So I downloaded bitcoin core to another laptop and I put them on there, I received them but afterwards I forgot to make a back up file, and now this happened. Worst possible scenario! – Axiom90 – 2017-11-06T02:18:15.053
1So what should I do then? turn on the laptop and make a full image back up or leave the laptop off? – Axiom90 – 2017-11-06T02:19:22.063
> "So I downloaded bitcoin core to another laptop and I put them on there" Then send them from the new laptop. Did you also lose the new laptop wallet.dat file? Don't turn on the old laptop if it's your only copy of the file. Bring it to someone you trust to connect it to an existing machine as a secondary drive and raw read the hard drive to extract the file. Did my answer or comments help? Upvote! – Scott – 2017-11-14T00:59:14.313