Once the image is loaded (or drive is mounted read-only), click the icon. The software scans for partitions. Version 10.9’s new "QuickScan" identifies partitions in 10 seconds, while the "FullScan" analyzes every sector for file signatures.
Built-in decryption modules for BitLocker, LUKS, TrueCrypt, VeraCrypt, and Apple FileVault. Advanced Disk Imaging and Bad Sector Handling
Configuring and recovering complex RAID arrays is a standout capability of version 10.9. The software features an embedded RAID builder that automatically or manually reconstructs: Standard levels: RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, RAID 6 Nested configurations: RAID 10, RAID 50, RAID 60 UFS Explorer Professional Recovery 10.9
UFS Explorer supports a massive array of file systems across all major platforms:
Goes beyond file system metadata to extract lost data, supporting a vast array of file systems including Windows (FAT/FAT32/exFAT, NTFS, ReFS/ReFS3), macOS (APFS, HFS+), Linux (XFS, Ext2-4, JFS, ReiserFS, UFS/UFS2, Btrfs), and BSD/Solaris. Once the image is loaded (or drive is
UFS Explorer Professional Recovery 10.9 does not hold your hand. It assumes you know the difference between MBR and GPT, and that you understand why you should never write back to the source drive. But for the professional who needs to resurrect data from a dead server, a corrupted NAS, or a client's wiped laptop, this software is as essential as a screwdriver and a multimeter.
Professionals rarely work directly on failing physical drives to prevent total hardware collapse. UFS Explorer 10.9 excels at handling virtual disk files and disk images, including: VMware VMDK Microsoft VHD/VHDX VirtualBox VDI Raw disk image files (DD, ISO, IMG) 5. Enhanced Hardware Integration UFS Explorer Professional Recovery 10
Custom and proprietary layouts: Drobo BeyondRAID, Synology Hybrid RAID (SHR), and unRAID
With macOS Ventura and Sonoma using encrypted and snapshot-heavy APFS volumes, older recovery tools struggled. UFS Explorer 10.9 now supports decryption of FileVault 2 drives directly and can traverse APFS snapshots to find "deleted" versions of files that Time Machine may have overwritten.