Boot disk failure
#1
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Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 7,122
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From: 5th Gen San Diegan, California
Boot disk failure
Hey guys.
So I am trying to fix a friends computer here, and I am stumped. Need some advice.
1) Their hard drive went kaput. I took it out and put in a new one.
2) Installed Win XP disk, did its thing. Said it needed to restart, take out CD and then you'd boot windows right?
3) Restarted, then get the "Boot disk error, put in boot disk and press enter."
BIOS recognizes the new drive, its the only one in there. I went to the Win Recovery Console, Windows is in there and installed.
I did fixboot and fixmbr. I think my next thing is to open boot.ini and see if its pointing to the correct windows folder? I dont know? What do I do? Any ideas?
So I am trying to fix a friends computer here, and I am stumped. Need some advice.
1) Their hard drive went kaput. I took it out and put in a new one.
2) Installed Win XP disk, did its thing. Said it needed to restart, take out CD and then you'd boot windows right?
3) Restarted, then get the "Boot disk error, put in boot disk and press enter."
BIOS recognizes the new drive, its the only one in there. I went to the Win Recovery Console, Windows is in there and installed.
I did fixboot and fixmbr. I think my next thing is to open boot.ini and see if its pointing to the correct windows folder? I dont know? What do I do? Any ideas?
#2
I'm sure you probably have done this, since it's obvious. But usually I would only get that error when it was trying to boot Windows from a drive that Windows was not installed on. For example, if there's a floppy disk sitting in the drive still, if "boot up floppy seek" is enabled in the BIOS, and there's a disk in there, you'll get that error. Check that first. You could also check if there is any flash drive (USB disk) or some other external device that has memory of any sort that might be plugged into it (like a camera). It sounds dumb, but I have come across cases where my friends computers wouldn't boot after a format simply because the BIOS somehow thought that a 512MB flash drive was the boot drive.
EDIT: If there are multiple partitions, there might be an error in the partitioning table, but I doubt it. In which case, format again...I find that's easier than trying to repair a corrupt partitioning table, at least when there is nothing I have to lose.
EDIT: If there are multiple partitions, there might be an error in the partitioning table, but I doubt it. In which case, format again...I find that's easier than trying to repair a corrupt partitioning table, at least when there is nothing I have to lose.
Last edited by Pest; Apr 30, 2007 at 12:00 PM.
#4
#5
make sure you don't have a floppy disk or such type of removable bootable drive connected
You would be surprised how many people reformat and reinstall windows only to find they left a floppy in the drive.
You would be surprised how many people reformat and reinstall windows only to find they left a floppy in the drive.
#6
All good replys, check the bios (disable the "A or "B" from the boot sequence temporarily), check any periferals and temporarily remove them (photo printers too), check and remove any additional disks or cd/dvd's (you can leave the install cd/dvd in until setup is complete). If all the above doesn't work reformat, partion and re-run setup is the best bet, repairing a disk on a new install is just asking for problems down the road. This is just a recap on good advise.
#7
Thread Starter
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Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 7,122
Likes: 6
From: 5th Gen San Diegan, California
Thanks for the advice guys. There are flash drives in this computer, but, nothing actually installed on them. I'll disconnect them from the MB though. I also disabled all bootable drives except the hard drive. Hmmph.
Well, after the blue screen install, it says to remove the disk from the computer! Should I leave it in?!! I'll try that too
Thanks agian.
Well, after the blue screen install, it says to remove the disk from the computer! Should I leave it in?!! I'll try that too
Thanks agian.
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#12
Leave the install CD/DVD in the drive after the bluescreen install, then remove it after the graphical install. If nothing still works, try doing a full format again, not just the "quick" format. The quick format only rewrites the partition tables, the full format writes 0's on the entire drive. Other than that, I dunno, the BIOS could just be unhappy with the new drive. Do you have another hard drive you could swap in and try that with?
#13
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Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 7,122
Likes: 6
From: 5th Gen San Diegan, California
The machine is about 3 years old. Wow. The harddrive is 160 gig, I wonder if that causing the problem!? But, I can see that the windows folder is installed, using the recovery feature using the XP CD.
Well I think I might have an extra hard drive actually. I'll try that first.
Well I think I might have an extra hard drive actually. I'll try that first.
Last edited by BajaRunner; May 1, 2007 at 06:37 AM.
#15
Thread Starter
Contributing Member
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 7,122
Likes: 6
From: 5th Gen San Diegan, California
I finally got it working. I think it was that the new hard drive was TOO BIG to be recognized by the bios, or something...
I put in a super old HD, installed windows on it, and it booted right up!! So, I just put the new hard drive as a slave, and now its just going to be the data disk, and Windows is loaded on the old one.
Thanks for the help guys!!
I put in a super old HD, installed windows on it, and it booted right up!! So, I just put the new hard drive as a slave, and now its just going to be the data disk, and Windows is loaded on the old one.
Thanks for the help guys!!
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