Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
You must have booted with your origonal c still attached.
Disconnect all drives except the one you want, reboot if it doesnt, use your win dvd to repair There is also a vague possibility that your mobo requires the use of a specific connector for the boot drive. "TimB" wrote in message ... Thanks, Peter. I did have them both connected, but just disconnected the original "C" drive and rebooted. I got a BIT farther when the light blue windows screen appeared. It now tells me that it couldn't find the path/file, etc to RUNDLL32.EXE. I assume that means that the OS paths are screwed up as the CLONE drive is still set at drive H: and I cannot see anyway to change it to drive C, which I assume the OS wants. Thoughts? Tim On Feb 25, 7:05 pm, "peter" wrote: That usually only happens when you boot with the Cloned drive and the drive you cloned from still attached. After a clone you are supposed to shut down, remove the old drive and place the new drive in its position then reboot. did you do that?? peter -- If you find a posting or message from me offensive,inappropriate or disruptive,please ignore it. If you dont know how to ignore a posting complain to me and I will be only too happy to demonstrate :-) "TimB" wrote in message ... I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can boot into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard
command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
Hi Peter -- I now have only the clone drive attached and Vista REPAIR
says that nothing it wrong but it still shows as drive H: I'm going to try Andy's solution now. Thanks for the link and command, Andy. I'm going to try that now. I assume that with MBRWizard only going to XP won't be a problem on Vista as I'm only dealing with the raw disk and command line. Seems that running it off a USB thumb drive or CD will work. Accessing it through the TASK MANAGER interface to start up a new TASK should be OK. Sound right? Thanks again, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:09*am, andy wrote: Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
Hi Peter -- I now have only the clone drive attached and Vista REPAIR
says that nothing it wrong but it still shows as drive H: I'm going to try Andy's solution now. Thanks for the link and command, Andy. I'm going to try that now. I assume that with MBRWizard only going to XP won't be a problem on Vista as I'm only dealing with the raw disk and command line. Seems that running it off a USB thumb drive or CD will work. Accessing it through the TASK MANAGER interface to start up a new TASK should be OK. Sound right? Thanks again, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:09*am, andy wrote: Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
THANKS, Andy. I assumed it was just something written into the boot
record or such, but I didn't know how to fix it. The command didn't work exactly as you mentioned, but close enough that I got there. First I tried running the command off a USB drive (seen as C: when I plugged it in) in COMMAND PROMPT but it failed, likely as the temporary iexplore desktop wasn't in ADMIN. Then I went back to it, right-clicked, and selected RUN AS ADMIN. That got me working, but the command didn't work. I wouldn't except /Signature=0, saying it needed 8 digit HEX number. So I then put in /Signature=00000000 and it 'took'. It probably hosed something up we didn't plan because I had to boot off the Vista DVD and do a repair but that went quickly and now Windows Vista booted with all icons and applications running as usual! THANK YOU, THANK YOU!! Thanks to YOU too Peter as you took the time to reply with good suggestions. Btw, it looks like some applications are a bit hosed because, as Peter suggested, I had both the original boot drive and the clone drive in at the same time when I booted after the cloning. I'll just have to work through them and do re-installs where necessary. Any last thoughts about how I re-introduce the OLD boot drive back into the system? As its boot record now knows it as G: can I simply plug it back in? I'd like to re-format it and use it for backups and storage. THANKS so much for the help, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:33*am, TimB wrote: Hi Peter -- I now have only the clone drive attached and Vista REPAIR says that nothing it wrong but it still shows as drive H: I'm going to try Andy's solution now. Thanks for the link and command, Andy. I'm going to try that now. I assume that with MBRWizard only going to XP won't be a problem on Vista as I'm only dealing with the raw disk and command line. Seems that running it off a USB thumb drive or CD will work. Accessing it through the TASK MANAGER interface to start up a new TASK should be OK. Sound right? Thanks again, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:09*am, andy wrote: Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
THANKS, Andy. I assumed it was just something written into the boot
record or such, but I didn't know how to fix it. The command didn't work exactly as you mentioned, but close enough that I got there. First I tried running the command off a USB drive (seen as C: when I plugged it in) in COMMAND PROMPT but it failed, likely as the temporary iexplore desktop wasn't in ADMIN. Then I went back to it, right-clicked, and selected RUN AS ADMIN. That got me working, but the command didn't work. I wouldn't except /Signature=0, saying it needed 8 digit HEX number. So I then put in /Signature=00000000 and it 'took'. It probably hosed something up we didn't plan because I had to boot off the Vista DVD and do a repair but that went quickly and now Windows Vista booted with all icons and applications running as usual! THANK YOU, THANK YOU!! Thanks to YOU too Peter as you took the time to reply with good suggestions. Btw, it looks like some applications are a bit hosed because, as Peter suggested, I had both the original boot drive and the clone drive in at the same time when I booted after the cloning. I'll just have to work through them and do re-installs where necessary. Any last thoughts about how I re-introduce the OLD boot drive back into the system? As its boot record now knows it as G: can I simply plug it back in? I'd like to re-format it and use it for backups and storage. THANKS so much for the help, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:33*am, TimB wrote: Hi Peter -- I now have only the clone drive attached and Vista REPAIR says that nothing it wrong but it still shows as drive H: I'm going to try Andy's solution now. Thanks for the link and command, Andy. I'm going to try that now. I assume that with MBRWizard only going to XP won't be a problem on Vista as I'm only dealing with the raw disk and command line. Seems that running it off a USB thumb drive or CD will work. Accessing it through the TASK MANAGER interface to start up a new TASK should be OK. Sound right? Thanks again, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:09*am, andy wrote: Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
Reconnecting the other drives shouldn't cause any problems.
On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 12:29:49 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: THANKS, Andy. I assumed it was just something written into the boot record or such, but I didn't know how to fix it. The command didn't work exactly as you mentioned, but close enough that I got there. First I tried running the command off a USB drive (seen as C: when I plugged it in) in COMMAND PROMPT but it failed, likely as the temporary iexplore desktop wasn't in ADMIN. Then I went back to it, right-clicked, and selected RUN AS ADMIN. That got me working, but the command didn't work. I wouldn't except /Signature=0, saying it needed 8 digit HEX number. So I then put in /Signature=00000000 and it 'took'. It probably hosed something up we didn't plan because I had to boot off the Vista DVD and do a repair but that went quickly and now Windows Vista booted with all icons and applications running as usual! THANK YOU, THANK YOU!! Thanks to YOU too Peter as you took the time to reply with good suggestions. Btw, it looks like some applications are a bit hosed because, as Peter suggested, I had both the original boot drive and the clone drive in at the same time when I booted after the cloning. I'll just have to work through them and do re-installs where necessary. Any last thoughts about how I re-introduce the OLD boot drive back into the system? As its boot record now knows it as G: can I simply plug it back in? I'd like to re-format it and use it for backups and storage. THANKS so much for the help, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:33*am, TimB wrote: Hi Peter -- I now have only the clone drive attached and Vista REPAIR says that nothing it wrong but it still shows as drive H: I'm going to try Andy's solution now. Thanks for the link and command, Andy. I'm going to try that now. I assume that with MBRWizard only going to XP won't be a problem on Vista as I'm only dealing with the raw disk and command line. Seems that running it off a USB thumb drive or CD will work. Accessing it through the TASK MANAGER interface to start up a new TASK should be OK. Sound right? Thanks again, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:09*am, andy wrote: Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
|||
Lost path to boot drive - Help please
Reconnecting the other drives shouldn't cause any problems.
On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 12:29:49 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: THANKS, Andy. I assumed it was just something written into the boot record or such, but I didn't know how to fix it. The command didn't work exactly as you mentioned, but close enough that I got there. First I tried running the command off a USB drive (seen as C: when I plugged it in) in COMMAND PROMPT but it failed, likely as the temporary iexplore desktop wasn't in ADMIN. Then I went back to it, right-clicked, and selected RUN AS ADMIN. That got me working, but the command didn't work. I wouldn't except /Signature=0, saying it needed 8 digit HEX number. So I then put in /Signature=00000000 and it 'took'. It probably hosed something up we didn't plan because I had to boot off the Vista DVD and do a repair but that went quickly and now Windows Vista booted with all icons and applications running as usual! THANK YOU, THANK YOU!! Thanks to YOU too Peter as you took the time to reply with good suggestions. Btw, it looks like some applications are a bit hosed because, as Peter suggested, I had both the original boot drive and the clone drive in at the same time when I booted after the cloning. I'll just have to work through them and do re-installs where necessary. Any last thoughts about how I re-introduce the OLD boot drive back into the system? As its boot record now knows it as G: can I simply plug it back in? I'd like to re-format it and use it for backups and storage. THANKS so much for the help, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:33*am, TimB wrote: Hi Peter -- I now have only the clone drive attached and Vista REPAIR says that nothing it wrong but it still shows as drive H: I'm going to try Andy's solution now. Thanks for the link and command, Andy. I'm going to try that now. I assume that with MBRWizard only going to XP won't be a problem on Vista as I'm only dealing with the raw disk and command line. Seems that running it off a USB thumb drive or CD will work. Accessing it through the TASK MANAGER interface to start up a new TASK should be OK. Sound right? Thanks again, guys! Tim On Feb 26, 11:09*am, andy wrote: Connect only the clone drive to the motherboard. Then use MBRWizard command http://mbrwizard.com/reference.php mbrwizd /disk=0 /signature=0 to zero the disk signature on the clone drive. Boot from the clone drive. On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 18:30:20 -0800 (PST), TimB wrote: I have a Windows Vista Ultimate system with 4 SATA hard drives configured to look like IDE drives through an ASUS motherboard. I had the boot drive set as drive C: with a variety of applications installed on it. Two days ago I 'cloned' that drive to a new larger drive with the most recent version of Norton Ghost. That drive showed as drive H:. I've been trying to get the new drive to show as drive c:, as all my applications want to read data or write settings to drive C:. I've used the disk manager in Vista to change the drive letter assignments, even swapped the SATA cables between the two and probably some other settings in BIOS, etc. -- The original boot drive now shows as drive G: and the 'new' drives shows as H:. The system is now SO screwed up that although I can “boot” into Windows it will not bring up any of my applications and simply shows a light blue background with no toolbars or icons. I can use Ctrl-Alt- Del to get into the task manager and try to start a management program but it always shows 'Path Not Found' and references drive H:. Can anyone make a suggestion on how I get one of the 'boot' drives seen as drive C: again and boot into Vista? Maybe even to the point where I can use the Vista DVD to repair one of them? Thanks for helping an idiot! Tim |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|