Lost one of my tables during a power spike. How can I
retrieve it back??
Jeff Boyce - 16 Feb 2004 22:24 GMT
Jeff
Provided nothing else has been done to the database, and/or the PC, you may
be able to have one of the commercial "rescue" companies recover your
database. Or you could use your most recent backup copy and write off the
data entry between when that backup was made and the spike...

Signature
Good luck
Jeff Boyce
<Access MVP
John Vinson - 17 Feb 2004 02:10 GMT
>Lost one of my tables during a power spike. How can I
>retrieve it back??
Difficult and perhaps impossible. Regular backups are obligatory.
One of the most recommended database salvage services is Peter
Miller's - http://www.pksolutions.com.
John W. Vinson[MVP]
Come for live chats every Tuesday and Thursday
http://go.compuserve.com/msdevapps?loc=us&access=public
Jeff C. - 18 Feb 2004 16:02 GMT
Thanks for all the advice. Is this Peter Miller Legit.
There has been no response or answer for the past 2 days.
>-----Original Message-----
>
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>http://go.compuserve.com/msdevapps?loc=us&access=public
>.
Kevin3NF - 18 Feb 2004 16:18 GMT
Yes, he is legit. He is also very busy....please keep trying.

Signature
Kevin Hill
President
3NF Consulting
www.3nf-inc.com/NewsGroups.htm
> Thanks for all the advice. Is this Peter Miller Legit.
> There has been no response or answer for the past 2 days.
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> >http://go.compuserve.com/msdevapps?loc=us&access=public
> >.
Allen Browne - 17 Feb 2004 02:40 GMT
Like Jeff Boyce and John Vinson, I am not too hopeful about this but it may
be worth trying this on a *copy* of your mdb file:
ACC2000: How to Recover a Table Deleted from a Database
at:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?id=209874

Signature
Allen Browne - Microsoft MVP. Perth, Western Australia.
Tips for Access users - http://allenbrowne.com/tips.html
Reply to group, rather than allenbrowne at mvps dot org.
> Lost one of my tables during a power spike. How can I
> retrieve it back??