Sanmaxi Access File Recovery (often found as Sanmaxi Access File Repair) is a specialized software utility developed by Sanmaxi IT Solutions Pvt. Ltd. designed to repair corrupted, damaged, or inaccessible Microsoft Access database files (.mdb and .accdb).
If your database has been rendered unreadable by virus attacks, sudden system shutdowns, or software glitches, this tool is built to extract and reconstruct your database components. Core Features
File Restoration: Fixes corrupted .mdb and .accdb file formats so that they can be accessed by the Jet database engine and Microsoft Access.
Selective Preview: Allows you to preview scanned database items—such as tables, queries, and relations—in a tree structure before committing to the recovery.
Flexible Export Options: Once data is recovered, you can export the information as a new, healthy MS Access Database (MDB/ACCDB) or as a CSV file for easy viewing in Microsoft Excel.
Schema & Data Saving: Gives you the option to recover just the schema (table structures) or both the schema and the raw table data.
Complex Data Support: Capable of restoring complicated data types like OLE Objects and MEMO fields, as well as multilingual data.
Accessibility Errors: Helps resolve common Access errors, such as the “Unrecognized Database Format” error or “Enter Password” prompts on unencrypted files. Compatibility
Sanmaxi Access File Repair generally supports a broad range of Microsoft Access versions, including legacy editions (like 97, 2000, XP, and 2003) up to newer editions. It is primarily designed to run on Windows operating systems (like Windows 7, 10, 11). Typical Use Cases Bypassing database header issues and data misalignments.
Recovering data after an Access database exceeds its maximum size limitation (e.g., 2GB for older MDB files).
Restoring data when MS Access’s built-in Compact and Repair utility fails to open or repair the corrupted file. A Quick Alternative
Before downloading third-party software, Microsoft also provides a built-in function called Compact and Repair, which can often resolve minor file corruptions. You can try running this tool from the Database Tools tab in MS Access before your files are completely overwritten or lost.
If you are dealing with a corrupt Access file and need help deciding on a recovery method, let me know:
What specific error message is Access showing when you try to open the file? What version of Microsoft Access are you using?
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