Step-by-Step Disk Heal Tutorial for Windows and macOS
Overview
A concise, practical walkthrough to install and use Disk Heal to scan, repair common disk issues, and attempt file recovery on Windows and macOS.
Before you start
- Backup: Copy important files to an external drive or cloud before repairs.
- Power: Ensure laptop is plugged in; don’t interrupt power during operations.
- Permissions: You’ll need administrator (Windows) or administrator/root (macOS) privileges.
Windows
1. Download & install
- Visit the official Disk Heal website and download the Windows installer.
- Right‑click the installer → Run as administrator.
- Follow prompts and accept permissions.
2. Launch and grant permissions
- Right‑click Disk Heal → Run as administrator.
- Allow any UAC prompts.
3. Initial scan
- Select the target drive (e.g., C:, external USB).
- Click Scan to run a quick surface/health check.
- Wait for scan to complete; note errors listed (bad sectors, file system inconsistencies).
4. Repair file system errors
- From the scan results, choose Repair file system or Fix errors.
- Let Disk Heal run chkdsk-like repairs; this may require a reboot for system drives.
- Reboot if prompted and allow automatic fixes.
5. Repair bad sectors
- Select Surface test / Repair bad sectors.
- Start low-level checks; this can be slow—monitor progress and avoid interrupting.
- If sectors are remapped successfully, mark drive as degraded and plan replacement.
6. Recover lost files
- Choose Recover files or Undelete.
- Pick file types or folders to target, and set a destination on a different drive.
- Start recovery; review recovered files and save important ones elsewhere.
7. Final verification
- Rerun a full scan to confirm repairs.
- Check SMART attributes (if available) for long‑term health indicators.
macOS
1. Download & install
- Download the macOS Disk Heal app (or DMG) from the official site.
- Open DMG → drag app to Applications.
- If Gatekeeper blocks it, open System Settings → Privacy & Security and allow the app.
2. Grant permissions
- Open Disk Heal; when prompted, grant Full Disk Access and any required permissions in System Settings → Privacy & Security.
- Authenticate as an admin.
3. Initial scan
- Select the drive (Macintosh HD or external).
- Click Scan to check APFS/HFS+ structures and surface issues.
- Review reported issues (catalog errors, corrupted metadata, bad blocks).
4. Repair file system with Disk Heal
- Choose Repair file system; if it cannot repair the startup volume while macOS is running, Disk Heal will instruct you to boot to Recovery or use an external installer.
- For startup drives, reboot into Recovery (Command‑R) and run Disk Heal from an external boot volume or use Disk Utility if Disk Heal provides instructions.
5. Repair bad blocks
- Run Surface/Block test; allow the app to remap or isolate bad blocks. Back up if remapping is extensive.
6. Recover deleted files
- Choose File Recovery.
- Select file types and destination (use an external drive).
- Scan and restore recovered files to the external destination.
7. Post‑repair checks
- Re-scan to confirm issues resolved.
- Use Disk Utility’s First Aid and check S.M.A.R.T. status (for external drives using third‑party tools).
Troubleshooting & tips
- If Disk Heal fails to repair system boot errors, use OS-native tools: Windows Recovery Environment + chkdsk /f, macOS Recovery + Disk Utility First Aid.
- For physical drive failure (clicking noise, rapidly increasing bad sectors), stop using the drive and consider professional recovery.
- Keep OS and Disk Heal updated; run regular scans monthly.
Quick checklist (both OS)
- Backup important data first.
- Run initial scan.
- Repair file system.
- Repair bad sectors (if any).
- Recover files to a different drive.
- Re-scan and monitor SMART.
If you want, I can convert this into a printable checklist, a one‑page tutorial, or a step sequence tailored to a specific Disk Heal version (stable vs. beta).
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