Re: New HDD Installation
- From: JohnH <JohnH@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 13:08:00 -0800
I did but there was no option to make it active/inactive. I want to try and
run the Repair Console so do I need to run just fixboot or run both fixboot
and fixmbr.
"John John" wrote:
It's probably already active but just to make sure right click on it and.
see if it can be made active in the context menu.
John
JohnH wrote:
I went into disk management and it had the following information about the
drive:
DRV2_VOL1 (C:), Type= Basic, Status= Online, Partition Style= Master Boot
Record(MBR). I did not see " active" but it stated Healthy System.
"John John" wrote:
Use the password for the "Built-In" Administrator account, not your
account. When you log on to the Recovery Console you do so with the
Built-In Administrator account. More often than not the password for
the account was left blank, you can just try pressing <Enter>. If you
have administrative privileges you can change the password for the
Built-In Administrator account, that way you will be sure that you have
the right password when you try to access the Recovery Console.
Also, while your installation is up and running use the Disk Management
tool and make sure that you have a properly identified System Partition
and that it is marked as "Active". If it is so identified and marked
and still won't boot then do both commands (fixmbr & fixboot) as Ron
suggested.
John
JohnH wrote:
I am set as the administrator but my password does not work with the Recovery
Console. I switched to classic view and went to the Admin Tools to enable
this, but there was not a Local Security Policy file or folder to click on
as instructed by your knowledge base article. The following files or folders
are available for selection:
1. Component Services
2. Data Sources (ODBC)
3. Event Viewer
4. Microsoft .Net Framework 1.1 Wizards
5. Services
6. Computer Management
7. Desktop.ini
8. Microsoft .Net Framework 1.1 Configuration
9. Performance
I was able to boot the system with the XP cd but I believe that a boot
sector must be missing as per Ron's advice. Any help with the admin password
should get me access to fix it. Do I need to run both fixmbr and fixboot or
just fixboot alone?
"John John" wrote:
Do as Ron suggested, if it works it's the easiest way to get your
installation up and running again.
Description of the Windows XP Recovery Console
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314058
Note that you may have to press the F6 key early in the setup process
and have the Maxtor SATO/150 PCI Card drivers on a diskette so that the
setup program may load them and properly identify your disc. See here
for information on storage controller drivers and Windows setup:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314859
Another quick check you can try is to see if you can boot the computer
with a startup floppy diskette. See here for information on how to
create such a disk: http://www.nu2.nu/bootdisk/ntboot/ Note that with
your hard disc on the Maxtor controller you will probably have to edit
the rdisk value in the boot.ini file, you can use the MAP ARC command
in the Recovery Console to get the proper ARC path and rdisk value for
the boot.ini file. See here for more information:
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/bootcons_map.mspx?mfr=true
John
JohnH wrote:
If I understand you correctly you want me to try and do a fresh install of
the Windows XP w/SP2. It would take awhile but I am willing to start fresh
if it gets the new HDD in and the small out. I just have a few questions
before doing this.
1. The Windows XP was an upgrade from the Windows Me that was installed in
the system and all I got was a restore disk. Do I need the Windows Me disk?
2. Can just booting the the XP upgrade work without an OS in place?
3. Do you know if it is reccomended to disable the motherboard IDE or just
leave on auto?
"Anna" wrote:
"JohnH" <JohnH@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:50BF24E1-58E0-455B-8496-9DDC82D2089B@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I bought a Western Digital 160GB Caviar SE EIDE Drive. My motherboard
is older so I was instructed to add a Maxtor SATO/150 PCI Card so the
full capacity of the HDD would be detected. I connected it and copied the
old drive over to it. After completion I was instructed to disconnect
the
old and put the new in it's place. Upon restart it ask for a boot disk
to
be installed. When I bought the system it had Windows ME on it and I do
not have a software disk but I was given a restore disk. I later
upgraded
to Windows XP w/ SP2. Can I use the restore disk or the Windows XP
upgrade disk as the boot disc. The support from Western Digital states
that it may
need to be done and some not, so I am confused as to how to make this as
quick and painless as posible. I also would like to know if disabling
the the
primary IDE off the motherboard in the CMOS would help too.
"Ron Sommer" wrote:
The new disk needs a boot sector.
If you just copied the partition, you didn't get the boot sector.
You can run fixmbr and fixboot.
--
Ronald Sommer
"JohnH" <JohnH@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:F3F46E78-948E-48A0-9DFB-DA6D37C8AEA6@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I used the HDD Installation Tool software to copy the partition from the
old drive to the new, I guess that would be a clone. The transfer seemed
uneventful and removal of the old drive was done. It seems to be asking
for a boot disk upon reboot once the old drive is removed. Can the
Windows ME
restore disk be used? Can the Windows XP w/SP2 upgrade be used? Anymore
advice would be greatly appreciated.
"Rich Barry" wrote:
John, you may have a setting in the Bios for that Maxtor Card. In
there will give you the ability to select the boot disk.
How did you copy the old drive to the new? Did you image it or clone
it?
"JohnH" <JohnH@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:C70B85D8-8350-442A-A606-BA4501408D09@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
How is this done? Once it is connected it requests a boot disk at
start-up.
Thanks for any help you can provide.
JohnH:
Maybe it's a good idea to start from the beginning, OK?
1. Your old HDD booted without incident and functioned without any problems
when it was installed, right? Its only problem was its small disk capacity,
right?
2. Now you've purchased a large-capacity WD SATA HDD and a SATA controller
card for connecting that SATA HDD, yes? And you've installed the SATA
controller card with no problems, right?
3. Setting aside the disk copying program (Maxtor? WD?) you used to copy the
contents of your old PATA HDD to the new SATA HDD...
How about making a fresh install of the XP OS onto your SATA HDD? Will it
boot & function without any problems if you do this?
Would it be possible for you to do this and then install your programs on
the freshly-installed XP OS? I assume you would have no problem copying over
your user-created data from the old HDD to the new SATA HDD, right? Or is it
too impractical to fresh install all your programs onto your new SATA HDD?
Anna
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