Pages:
Author

Topic: Unsure what to do with .wallet file (Read 509 times)

jr. member
Activity: 185
Merit: 1
October 01, 2019, 06:51:36 PM
#26
   Yea I do have a habit of dropping in to help people that is because I like to help them. I hope she decide to ask for my help because i can at least try even if she gave up. She said the file was a text of passphrase not the wallet Haiden if you see this i would still be glad to help just let me know then your move.
HCP
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 4318
September 30, 2019, 08:06:05 PM
#25
if you followed the post, youll notice i told people i had to sell my computer, i only found this response because of my email. but thanks for taking the time to not only fail to read my posts, but accuse me of being unfair. your greed is really shining through.

the very reason i even bothered looking through hdds is because im currently out of work and was desperate, but im not selfish.
Don't worry about that guy... if you look through his post history, he has a habit of dropping into "I need help recovering wallet" type posts, saying something really "helpful" like:
Do you know your bitcoin address you can look it up on blockchain.com. If you have your private key still you can recover your coins. Just go to electrum.org them copy it in electrum and you should be able to get it. Let me know if you need help and if you get it send me the reward.
And then disappearing... his history is full of examples like that and asking for 1+BTC loans without collateral etc... Roll Eyes


Sorry to hear that you had to sell your PC and that you were unable to recover the wallet... in all honesty, the recovered .wallet files you found sounded like they were quite badly corrupted. Generally, a multibit .wallet file (even if it was locked with a password) would still show something like this when opened in a text editor:


So, if your .wallet files didn't show the "org.bitcoin.production" (and/or the "org.multibit.walletProtect.2") text, then they were most likely corrupted or not multibit wallet files. Undecided
jr. member
Activity: 185
Merit: 1
September 30, 2019, 06:21:47 PM
#24
 Hi im sorry I didnt mean to sound rude. Hope I didnt im just in need of some btc also and would love to help solve it im good with wallets. If you still have the files i can still try to help you. Who knows maybe ill have a solution to help you out also get you back btc for you and me. But if not ill leave it at that.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 30, 2019, 02:18:44 PM
#23
 Hi I guess your dont need any help where are you? Everyone gave you suggestions to help then all sudden you dont want to talk. You said you were serious about giving reward of one fourth if anyone helped. Did anyone help you or did you just take the bitcoin for yourself. This dont make sense you wanted help then just stop postin. I hope you do the right thing like you said and give the bitcoin to who ever helped you shouldnt leave people hangin. Well if you did get the coin then my address is 13ogmvro1bzG7i1rqYCxs67KzK7k1fEhqQ
 I hope you dont leave and do us right.  We all should help each other because you asked .

if you followed the post, youll notice i told people i had to sell my computer, i only found this response because of my email. but thanks for taking the time to not only fail to read my posts, but accuse me of being unfair. your greed is really shining through.

the very reason i even bothered looking through hdds is because im currently out of work and was desperate, but im not selfish.
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
September 30, 2019, 12:29:16 PM
#22
I've used Recuva before, basically it just undeletes whatever it can find. Although binary files can get tricky, it might add or subtract a byte or two and that could ruin the file. You never know though.

I hope you get your coin. I've never used multibit as I didn't agree with how it worked back then, always stuck with Core (no matter how unwieldy it is, you have to download the whole blockchain now.
jr. member
Activity: 185
Merit: 1
September 22, 2019, 12:09:24 AM
#21
  Hi I guess your dont need any help where are you? Everyone gave you suggestions to help then all sudden you dont want to talk. You said you were serious about giving reward of one fourth if anyone helped. Did anyone help you or did you just take the bitcoin for yourself. This dont make sense you wanted help then just stop postin. I hope you do the right thing like you said and give the bitcoin to who ever helped you shouldnt leave people hangin. Well if you did get the coin then my address is 13ogmvro1bzG7i1rqYCxs67KzK7k1fEhqQ
 I hope you dont leave and do us right.  We all should help each other because you asked .
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 22, 2019, 12:05:18 AM
#20
sorry havent been able to get online, on an old tablet. had to sell my pc. i havent no. probably a lost cause. 
jr. member
Activity: 185
Merit: 1
September 22, 2019, 12:02:17 AM
#19
 So have you been able to get the wallet open? Ive not heard from you.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 21, 2019, 01:02:49 AM
#18
hi i appreciate the response. not sure how you could, but id be forever thankful. im very serious about a percentage going to who can. ive had people pm me already, they just wanted me to send them the information. of course i wouldn't do that. im desperate sure but not naive. if you have any ideas itd be helpful to post here i think, that way maybe someone can give input on ideas. ideas are always better when shared anyway i think. thank you once again.

im selling my system in a week i think, but will keep hdds. got to eat after all.
jr. member
Activity: 185
Merit: 1
September 20, 2019, 04:28:15 PM
#17
 Hi , Haiden can I talk to you please send me a pm. I think I know how to help you. Im not trying to trick you into anything or if you like I can post it here let me know soon. Thanks
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 20, 2019, 11:51:11 AM
#16
the only files i was able to find so far are text files, but the text is gibberish. "8–’XJQ*æhµ»Ç7U(Y^;I±T¡Û" . but the title of the files seems very familiar. one of the file names is "PPhrase".


im probably giving up soon , unfortunately i need the money so im selling my pc. appreciate all the help.
legendary
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1183
September 20, 2019, 07:52:57 AM
#15
Just a warning, dont make the mistake of trusting some newbies who PM you and ask you to send them your wallet file. Someone might try to take advantage of your situation although without the passphrase it is hard to get ahead.

I've been on the net since dial-up, that could never happen. Appreciate the concern.


Update:

I am unable to access the file which I apparently saved as a .txt , which I am certain was a text file that I left the passphrase on. I also may have left a private comment on my FB page, to myself, with said passphrase. That is in the early days of BTC tho I believe, back when a lot of people did not believe it would go anywhere. I'm going to check all posts I made from specific years, to make certain. I also seem to recall trashing an HDD due to some , uh, questionable stuff I may/may not have been up to back then. Pretty sure I had a couple wallets on there. facepalming hard here.

What did you scan your drives with? There ate several lowl scanners for tgis

I'm not very well versed on all the different types, I'll admit. What I used was Recuva.


Edit: I'm sure you've all heard this before, but if I managed to work this out with help, I would absolutely compensate whoever. Hard times are upon me, which is what lead me to even bother.

Does Recuva give you an orange or a red mark for the .txt filename? If it's orange, it should be pretty possible to get it back, even within recuva, using the deep search thing and turning on all the recovery settings. If it's red, it's probably overwritten several times by now. The good news is its an HDD so there is no degradation when it's stopped compared to SSD.

Even if it's red, you have a chance if a pro looks at your case with the required gear, or you can learn doing it yourself. Do not plug the HDD again within a computer, you need special gear to make a copy and work from there. In this forum you can asks some data recovery experts: http://eraser.heidi.ie/forum/

I wouldn't bother with bruteforcing unless the password was less than 8 characters without special characters.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 19, 2019, 12:59:58 AM
#14
Any ideas for a password? Numbers, letters, length, encoding, etc? If you are sure that it's on the disk and there is some idea of ​​it's format, then you can find everything that looks like a password scanning the dump of the disk or using direct access and try to use it to unlock the wallet in auto mode. But programming skills and knowledge of files system are needed here. For example, there are MFT (master file table) in NTFS. And small files (called resident files) are store entirely within their MFT record. I think recovery program should do correct restore this files, but if MFT damaged maybe better try to restore manually. So first step for NTFS is scan MFT file for small txt data.

You can try to restore the partition using different programs.
For low-level access, manual recovery, dump I used WinHEX (but you need to figure out how the file system works), to restore partitions - testdisk.
For automatic file recovery, it is better to try as many programs as possible, sometimes different programs sometimes give different results.
In any case, first of all you need to have a copy of the disc in case the original accidentally damage.
Good luck.

I appreciate the response. I will try what you suggested. What I am offering is 1/4 of the total amount. I am certain there is quite a bit, becaue I bought a bunch of coin way back when BTC first came out. Will keep you al posted, thanks again.

Edit: I did make a copy as well, thats the first thing I did before attempting any recovery.
hero member
Activity: 750
Merit: 511
September 19, 2019, 12:16:43 AM
#13
Any ideas for a password? Numbers, letters, length, encoding, etc? If you are sure that it's on the disk and there is some idea of ​​it's format, then you can find everything that looks like a password scanning the dump of the disk or using direct access and try to use it to unlock the wallet in auto mode. But programming skills and knowledge of files system are needed here. For example, there are MFT (master file table) in NTFS. And small files (called resident files) are store entirely within their MFT record. I think recovery program should do correct restore this files, but if MFT damaged maybe better try to restore manually. So first step for NTFS is scan MFT file for small txt data.

You can try to restore the partition using different programs.
For low-level access, manual recovery, dump I used WinHEX (but you need to figure out how the file system works), to restore partitions - testdisk.
For automatic file recovery, it is better to try as many programs as possible, sometimes different programs sometimes give different results.
In any case, first of all you need to have a copy of the disc in case the original accidentally damage.
Good luck.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 18, 2019, 03:00:52 AM
#12
Just a warning, dont make the mistake of trusting some newbies who PM you and ask you to send them your wallet file. Someone might try to take advantage of your situation although without the passphrase it is hard to get ahead.

I've been on the net since dial-up, that could never happen. Appreciate the concern.


Update:

I am unable to access the file which I apparently saved as a .txt , which I am certain was a text file that I left the passphrase on. I also may have left a private comment on my FB page, to myself, with said passphrase. That is in the early days of BTC tho I believe, back when a lot of people did not believe it would go anywhere. I'm going to check all posts I made from specific years, to make certain. I also seem to recall trashing an HDD due to some , uh, questionable stuff I may/may not have been up to back then. Pretty sure I had a couple wallets on there. facepalming hard here.

What did you scan your drives with? There ate several lowl scanners for tgis

I'm not very well versed on all the different types, I'll admit. What I used was Recuva.


Edit: I'm sure you've all heard this before, but if I managed to work this out with help, I would absolutely compensate whoever. Hard times are upon me, which is what lead me to even bother.
jr. member
Activity: 87
Merit: 5
September 18, 2019, 12:37:36 AM
#11
Just a warning, dont make the mistake of trusting some newbies who PM you and ask you to send them your wallet file. Someone might try to take advantage of your situation although without the passphrase it is hard to get ahead.

I've been on the net since dial-up, that could never happen. Appreciate the concern.


Update:

I am unable to access the file which I apparently saved as a .txt , which I am certain was a text file that I left the passphrase on. I also may have left a private comment on my FB page, to myself, with said passphrase. That is in the early days of BTC tho I believe, back when a lot of people did not believe it would go anywhere. I'm going to check all posts I made from specific years, to make certain. I also seem to recall trashing an HDD due to some , uh, questionable stuff I may/may not have been up to back then. Pretty sure I had a couple wallets on there. facepalming hard here.

What did you scan your drives with? There ate several lowl scanners for tgis
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 4
September 06, 2019, 06:44:44 PM
#10
Just a warning, dont make the mistake of trusting some newbies who PM you and ask you to send them your wallet file. Someone might try to take advantage of your situation although without the passphrase it is hard to get ahead.

I've been on the net since dial-up, that could never happen. Appreciate the concern.


Update:

I am unable to access the file which I apparently saved as a .txt , which I am certain was a text file that I left the passphrase on. I also may have left a private comment on my FB page, to myself, with said passphrase. That is in the early days of BTC tho I believe, back when a lot of people did not believe it would go anywhere. I'm going to check all posts I made from specific years, to make certain. I also seem to recall trashing an HDD due to some , uh, questionable stuff I may/may not have been up to back then. Pretty sure I had a couple wallets on there. facepalming hard here.
member
Activity: 686
Merit: 45
September 06, 2019, 05:13:12 PM
#9
Just a warning, dont make the mistake of trusting some newbies who PM you and ask you to send them your wallet file. Someone might try to take advantage of your situation although without the passphrase it is hard to get ahead.
HCP
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 4318
September 06, 2019, 03:46:03 PM
#8
OK , that is done. It has been syncing for about 2 mins or so. Unsure if thats a good sign or not.
It might not "sync" properly... That client is so old and outdated, that it might not be working correctly. However, if you have managed to open the .wallet files with MultiBit Classic, then you might want to try:

1. Look at the "Request" tab... it should show any addresses contained within the wallet. Then check those addresses on a block explorer like blockchain.com or BlockCypher

2. Try and export the private keys using "Tools -> Export Private Keys"


Finally, is the wallet displayed with a little padlock icon this:


If so, it is definitely password protected and you'll need that password to send coins or export the private keys Undecided
legendary
Activity: 3514
Merit: 5123
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
September 06, 2019, 05:05:56 AM
#7
--snip--
Edit: Also, I suppose it does not matter if there is BTC in there, considering I do not have the passphrase. Man that would be a kick in the face if I found coin in the wallet.

If you have *any* idear what your password *might* look like, you can always try to setup btcrecover:
https://github.com/gurnec/btcrecover

Mind you, this will ONLY work if you have a clue what your password will more or less look like (for example, if you know you only used upper/lowercase letters and numbers, and always create passwords that are 5 - 10 letters long, and you're pretty sure you always use a date in your password => you might have a shot at bruteforcing the password, eventough it might take a very long time)
Pages:
Jump to: