Disk Copy .img w/out resource fork
Due to cramped-ness of my 2 gb drive, lack of CD burner, and difficulty Apple-Talking between OS 9 and Tiger, I decided to have Disk Copy write the .img directly to my USB thumb drive.
Unfortunately, the thumb drive was naturally in a FAT format. And since it took upwards of four hours to create and compress the .img via my USB 1.1 connection, I decided not to test mount it before I proceeded with the repartition. And so I didn't realize until much too late that the .img I'd created was doomed to fail from the start, being without a resource fork.
So now I've spent two days trying to recover the pristine beauties of the .img data fork but have so far failed.
I've used ResEdit to create a fork and copy and paste into it the three necessary resource types from various uncorrupted .imgs made specifically for the purpose. I've reset creator and type to rohd and ddsk. I've tried fiddling with the code in the bcem resource to trick Disk Copy into mounting the issue. I've turned off all checksumming. I've tried both Disk Copy and the Disk Utilities in Jaguar and Tiger. And I've tried to mount it with a disk-mounting utility in Windows XP, thinking that perhaps a Windows utility might succeed, not needing the resource fork.
Nothing has worked. I get a variety of errors depending on which OS I'm working in, but the gist is the same. File is damaged; can't be mounted.
I've been through all the what-ifs and should-haves, and I've ransacked Google and various boards for ideas, and I'm still stuck.
Does anyone know of a method whereby the contents of an (unfortunately) compressed Disk Copy .img can be recovered without the resource fork? I've got 835 mb of perfect data that I can't access for the lack of a few k.
Are there any bcem resource hacks I can try?
Any third party utilities?
Windows utilities?
I'd even be willing to try hacking Disk Copy itself if somebody could get me pointed in the right direction.
Disk Copy, give me back my legions!!
Thanks for any and all help.
Dave
Wallstreet, eMac, Intel iMac, Mac OS 9.2.x, G3: 8.6, 9.2.2, 10.2.8; e/iMacs: Tiger; iMac: XP