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Old December 28th 04, 04:13 PM
Paul Rubin
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I'm no expert either but I thought FAT32 was just like FAT16 except
the pointers were wider. That is, there are two separate copies of
the FAT (primary and secondary) just in case the primary gets
clobbered in a crash. Maybe that can solve your problem. Also, the
FAT entry points only to the first file block. Each block then
contains a pointer to the next block.

Maybe this program can help also:

http://www.briggsoft.com/dsnoop.htm