Yes, forms, reports, and modules can often be recovered from a damaged MDB file because these objects are stored within the database itself. In many corruption cases, Microsoft Access is unable to interpret the damaged file structure, even though much of the actual data and application design remains intact. This is why a specialized recovery solution is often more effective than relying solely on the built-in repair options.
The SysInfo MS Access Recovery Tool scans the damaged MDB or ACCDB file using either Standard or Advanced recovery mode, depending on the severity of corruption. During the scan, it searches for recoverable database components such as tables, queries, forms, reports, modules, indexes, relationships, OLE objects, MEMO data, and deleted records. Once the process finishes, the recovered items are displayed in a structured preview so you can verify the results before saving. The software then creates a new healthy Access database containing the recovered objects, allowing you to continue using your application without modifying the original damaged file.
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