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  • PLEASE help! FCP file is corrupted and now wont open Muhammad Ali documentary

    Posted by Profoundlogic on October 31, 2005 at 9:17 am

    Please help me with my small Muhammad Ali documentary. Please dont tell me I should have backed up!! ***

    When I try to open the project it just says, ‘This file seems to have been corrupted’ and can not read this file.

    I know that the files are on a external drive which I shutdown without dragging the icon to the trash. I dont think the files are actually corrupted.

    CAN YOU PLEASE let me know how I can recover these project files.

    Your help really appreciated. On screen credit for those acting as technical angels.

    Thanks, Tina

    Alexander Serpico replied 20 years, 6 months ago 6 Members · 9 Replies
  • 9 Replies
  • Felix Bueno

    October 31, 2005 at 10:06 am

    Hi

    I don’t understand whether the corrupted files are the media files or the project file.

    If the project file is corrupted just search in your scratch disk, there is a folder named “Autosave Vault”. FCP keep there copies of your last opened projects every 30 minutes.

    But if the media file is corrupted, the only way is trying to recover the disk data with specialized software, but it is dangerous. Norton Disk Doctor for example could fix it.

    Hope it helps…

    Felix

  • Profoundlogic

    October 31, 2005 at 10:22 am

    Dear Felix,

    They are the Project files. The FCP icon for a project that is. No idea why it has happened but I will check for this vault file when I go in today.

    All the project files have been corrupted that were on this disk (ie for other projects too) but they were not open when I unhooked the external drive from the machine so I dont know why this has happened.

    Thanks for all your help!

    Best, Tina

  • Walter Biscardi

    October 31, 2005 at 10:27 am

    [Profoundlogic] “I know that the files are on a external drive which I shutdown without dragging the icon to the trash. I dont think the files are actually corrupted.”

    Your Project files should NEVER be on an external drive and yes, you could have damaged them when you shut it down without ejecting. Project files should only be on your internal drive and definitely not on any drives that have media.

    I would run a Repair Disk Permissions on that external drive to see if that fixes it and if not, purchase Disk Warrior and run it on there, though that may cause more issues than it fixes if there is media also on that drive.

    Walter Biscardi, Jr.
    https://www.biscardicreative.com

    Now editing “Good Eats” in HD for the Food Network

    “I reject your reality and substitute my own!” – Adam Savage, Mythbusters

  • Eli Mavros

    October 31, 2005 at 5:25 pm

    You didn’t happen to try to open the project in an earlier verion of FCP did you? Whenever you try to open an FCP5 project in FCP4.5 it will give you the corrupt file message. The only way you can do this successfully is with XML. I am pretty sure that this is not the case…but I figured I would throw it out there just in case.

    Best,
    Eli

    Eli Mavros

  • Profoundlogic

    October 31, 2005 at 6:22 pm

    thanks for that but no, it is the same version!

  • Kevin Monahan

    October 31, 2005 at 6:36 pm

    Were all the auto-save copies corrupted? No project files uploaded to the internet or iDisk? Did you do any recent work on another machine? Maybe there is a copy of the project in that machine’s autosave vault?

    Besides that, the only help I can offer you is in this article: https://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/restore_corrupted_project.html

    If nothing suggested in the article works, I’d say you probably need to start re-editing this piece. Unfortunately, it’s the price you pay if you rely upon a single digital file with no workable backup. It’s a painful lesson to learn for sure.

    Kevin Monahan
    Take My FCP Master’s Seminar!
    fcpworld.com

  • Alexander Serpico

    October 31, 2005 at 8:09 pm

    Are you really saying that a disk must be ejected before shutdown?

    I was positive this was a huge misconception among novices, since the OS unmounts all drives on shutdown anyway.

    Or is this just best practice?

  • Kevin Monahan

    November 2, 2005 at 2:21 am

    Alexander. It’s true that you have to unmount in my experience. The only time I’ve screwed up the directory on my drives is when I have not.

    Kevin Monahan
    Take My FCP Master’s Seminar!
    fcpworld.com

  • Alexander Serpico

    November 2, 2005 at 5:00 pm

    i guess ive just been lucky for the last seven years…. although i guess i do know some people who have not.

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