

Louisans already know about this one – plenty of used brick dealers here in town, as lots of homeowners want that vintage look (if they don’t already have it). At the commercial level, used concrete has plenty of other uses, including “road base, general fill, pavement aggregate, and drainage media.” The Construction & Demolition Recycling Association identifies other potential markets for this material. We’ve discussed urbanite (broken concrete) before, and how hand-builders might want to use it for building foundations. The University of Wisconsin’s Recycled Materials Resource Center has a ton of information on this material provides some figures on potential savings/profits. Tearing up a parking lot? Recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) has multiple potential uses in road construction and repair. If you’re in the demolition business, or know someone who is, you might want to check the local market for these materials before that big steel ball starts swinging: 1.
#FILESALVAGE DEMO PLUS#
The EPA’s brochure on resource recovery from brownfield sites list all of the materials on Elder’s list… plus quite a few others. Five More Materials You May Want to Salvage from Building Demolition So, I started poking around a bit, and, in no time, came across many more materials that could earn a building owner and/or demolisher a little cash on the side… and keep them out of the landfill. While I’m neither a demolitions or a building salvage expert, a couple of other materials came immediately to mind. According to demolition contractor JD Elder, the top five materials that a demolition crew will want to hold onto include:
#FILESALVAGE DEMO MAC#
I even tried Test Disk, GParted and some Windows alternatives like Partition Guru, Data Recovery HFS+ and like the others I tried on my Mac the closest I got was to recover the files, but I don't have a 3tb HDD to backup the first one - some apps did recover it raw, but I don't even know what to do with 2tb of raw data.Īnyway, what I want is to recover my HDD's partition table like it was before all of this, any suggestion?Īnd why is it so hard to do with HFS+? Some 10 years back I had a similar accident with my Windows desktop and could undo it in a matter of hours including the time I spent looking for answers on the web.It turns out that a sharp-eyed demolitions expert may think just that… and his/her first act at a job site may well involve figuring out what not to demolish, but rather salvage for sale. None seems to do what I want, which is to restore my partition table. Since then (almost a month now!) I've been trying anything I can get a demo of the web: Stellar, iPartition, DiskDrill, Disk Warrior, TechTool, Data Rescue, FileSalvage, Yodot, etc. Well, that app didn't restore anything and now I have a blank 3tb HDD.


Why not, a quick reformat won't really erase anything as long as I don't rewrite it and restore it's partition, right? So I tried some demos I've downloaded for this task and one of them asked for me to reformat the HDD. The thing is, once I tried to use Tiger to repartition my external HDD like I used to do with Snow Leopard, it's partition table got screwed up! After some reading on the web I found out Tiger's partition scheme is different but it was too late. Which I did, I bought a Powerbook G4 1,67ghz since I was on a budget and needed a laptop. No biggie, I had everything on my 3tb external HDD and I can always buy another Mac.

Well, a few months back I had to sell my 2008 iMac (C2D w/ Snow Leopard) because I was moving to somewhere 3.000 miles away.
