4 December 2025, 01:22 PM
If you’re running a virtual machine for work, and one day the VHD file suddenly becomes inaccessible. Windows keeps showing an error, and your virtual machine refuses to start. Panic sets in because the VHD contains important projects, documents, or even entire server configurations. Instead of trying risky manual fixes, you decide to use a tool like the SysInfo VHD Recovery Tool.
You start it up, add the corrupted VHD file, and choose the type of scan depending on how damaged the file is. If it’s a minor issue, the Standard scan is enough. If the file looks severely broken, you switch to Advanced mode. The software begins scanning sector by sector, identifying volumes, and rebuilding the internal structure. When the scan completes, it shows all the files and folders in a clean tree view, just like they were before corruption. You can restore everything or just select the important parts. You can even create a disk image as a backup. Within a few minutes, your virtual machine data is back, and you feel like you’ve rescued something that was almost lost.
You start it up, add the corrupted VHD file, and choose the type of scan depending on how damaged the file is. If it’s a minor issue, the Standard scan is enough. If the file looks severely broken, you switch to Advanced mode. The software begins scanning sector by sector, identifying volumes, and rebuilding the internal structure. When the scan completes, it shows all the files and folders in a clean tree view, just like they were before corruption. You can restore everything or just select the important parts. You can even create a disk image as a backup. Within a few minutes, your virtual machine data is back, and you feel like you’ve rescued something that was almost lost.
