Be very careful about following the advice of the people that have posted in this thread.
There is a little bit of good advice, and a WHOLE LOT of really bad advice.
Most importantly, there is too much information missing from you to give you really good advice. Those that are doing the best job of helping are doing two things:
- Advising you to stop using the computer to avoid accidentally overwriting the space on the hard drive where the deleted file might reside
- Asking you questions to get a better understanding of exactly what you did instead of making assumptions that might be wrong.
Also note:
RawDog is a troll. The link he's posting is a joke. You cannot retrieve your private keys from that site.
Because of an error I was experiencing with my notebook I had to manually delete the entire block-chain and reinstall it without saving the wallet.dat file (which I didn't know it existed at that point)
How did you "manually delete the entire block-chain"? Exactly what did you do? The wallet.dat is typically stored in a different folder than the blockchain. If you are sure that you deleted the wallet.dat, then the ONLY way to recover those bitcoins is to recover a copy of that deleted file from the hard drive. If you only deleted the blockchain, then the wallet.dat that you are using right now *might* still be the same wallet.dat that you were using then.
I guess my question at this point is: Having the private key where I sent that 1 Bitcoin can I create somehow , using that private key, another transaction where I send that 1 Bitcoin to my new wallet.dat file?
The private key is stored in the wallet.dat.
If you have the private key, then you can definitely create a new transaction that transfers those bitcoins to a new address. If you only have the address, Reference ID, transaction ID, date, time, amount, and where it came from, then there is nothing you can do.
If you don't have the wallet.dat, then where are you going to get the private key?