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date: Sat, 11 Oct 2008 11:04:01 -0700,    group: microsoft.public.windows.vista.general        back       


Now What? Vista Ultimate Blue Screen   
Crashed with bad disk indicated.
Interestingly I had a few flashes of a solid blue screen once in a while 
over the past two days.  Must have been a waring of impending doom.
Ran Vista SP1 boot up from CD ( I use F12 to select boot device)
Selected language
selected "Repair Your Computer"
Skipped "Load Drivers"
But I did explore this and saw all drives and folders present.
Ran repair at "Startup Repair"

Ran successfully. 
Checked Diagnostic and Repair Details.
"The Partition Table does not have a valid system partition.
Partition table repair
Completed successfully
Error code 0x0
took 51 sec.

System Disk=\Device\HardDisk

 ReStarted on my command
  but still will not boot from hard disk.

So now the interesting part and maybe where I can get in if someone can help 
and or confirms my thoughts.
I have too much to do all over agains and the AUTOMATIC BACKUP kept NOT 
running.  Another problem to fix.

Anyway, looking at the folders when the "Load Driver" opportunity came up 
during this repair process:
The hard disks are all there but C: was not C:.
The D: shown is actually the C: (boot) drive.
Two other drives looked OK.
What is up with this?
These are all SATA drives.
Do I need to switch cables to the motherboard so the repair process sees the 
physical C: drive as C: or do I use the BIOS to change things?
As I said earier, all drives seem to be fully there but maybe tjhe repair sw 
is confused about what drive to boot or what drive to repair.
There is no choice to select a drive to repair that I can see.
What next?
Suggestions please.  (this is my Media Center TV too)
date: Sat, 11 Oct 2008 11:04:01 -0700   author:   Lorin

Re: Now What? Vista Ultimate Blue Screen   
Lorin wrote:

> Crashed with bad disk indicated.
> Interestingly I had a few flashes of a solid blue screen once in a while
> over the past two days.  Must have been a waring of impending doom.
> Ran Vista SP1 boot up from CD ( I use F12 to select boot device)
> Selected language
> selected "Repair Your Computer"
> Skipped "Load Drivers"
> But I did explore this and saw all drives and folders present.
> Ran repair at "Startup Repair"
> 
> Ran successfully.
> Checked Diagnostic and Repair Details.
> "The Partition Table does not have a valid system partition.
> Partition table repair
> Completed successfully
> Error code 0x0
> took 51 sec.
> 
> System Disk=\Device\HardDisk
> 
>  ReStarted on my command
>   but still will not boot from hard disk.
> 
> So now the interesting part and maybe where I can get in if someone can
> help and or confirms my thoughts.
> I have too much to do all over agains and the AUTOMATIC BACKUP kept NOT
> running.  Another problem to fix.
> 
> Anyway, looking at the folders when the "Load Driver" opportunity came up
> during this repair process:
> The hard disks are all there but C: was not C:.
> The D: shown is actually the C: (boot) drive.
> Two other drives looked OK.
> What is up with this?
> These are all SATA drives.
> Do I need to switch cables to the motherboard so the repair process sees
> the physical C: drive as C: or do I use the BIOS to change things?
> As I said earier, all drives seem to be fully there but maybe tjhe repair
> sw is confused about what drive to boot or what drive to repair.
> There is no choice to select a drive to repair that I can see.
> What next?
> Suggestions please.  (this is my Media Center TV too)

It sounds like your hard drive has died. Run a thorough diagnostic on it
using a utility downloaded from the drive mftr.'s website. If the drive
fails any physical tests, replace it.

http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Hardware_Tshoot

Malke
-- 
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
date: Sat, 11 Oct 2008 12:01:34 -0700   author:   Malke lid

Re: Now What? Vista Ultimate Blue Screen   
Which drive?
i.e. how do I identify it from however I look at it.
It seems that Vista is calling a drive C: when in fact it was never C: but 
D: at least in the recovery scenario.

I have four large drives and I do have the mfr disk Seagate.
What is the software to test with?

If Vista says it fixed it, then why did it not boot?
Vista only made one pass at fixing and said it was fixed.
Maybe it was trying to fix the wrong drive because the drive it says is C: 
never was a boot drive.  So is Vista trying to boot that.  Can it change the 
boot order or change the BIOS to change the order?
The drive it calls D: was the boot drive C:.
So what I am looking for is how to know who is doing what so I can know what 
physical drive is called so i can work on what was the C: boot drive.
Sorry if I am not clearer.


"Malke" wrote:

> Lorin wrote:
> 
> > Crashed with bad disk indicated.
> > Interestingly I had a few flashes of a solid blue screen once in a while
> > over the past two days.  Must have been a waring of impending doom.
> > Ran Vista SP1 boot up from CD ( I use F12 to select boot device)
> > Selected language
> > selected "Repair Your Computer"
> > Skipped "Load Drivers"
> > But I did explore this and saw all drives and folders present.
> > Ran repair at "Startup Repair"
> > 
> > Ran successfully.
> > Checked Diagnostic and Repair Details.
> > "The Partition Table does not have a valid system partition.
> > Partition table repair
> > Completed successfully
> > Error code 0x0
> > took 51 sec.
> > 
> > System Disk=\Device\HardDisk
> > 
> >  ReStarted on my command
> >   but still will not boot from hard disk.
> > 
> > So now the interesting part and maybe where I can get in if someone can
> > help and or confirms my thoughts.
> > I have too much to do all over agains and the AUTOMATIC BACKUP kept NOT
> > running.  Another problem to fix.
> > 
> > Anyway, looking at the folders when the "Load Driver" opportunity came up
> > during this repair process:
> > The hard disks are all there but C: was not C:.
> > The D: shown is actually the C: (boot) drive.
> > Two other drives looked OK.
> > What is up with this?
> > These are all SATA drives.
> > Do I need to switch cables to the motherboard so the repair process sees
> > the physical C: drive as C: or do I use the BIOS to change things?
> > As I said earier, all drives seem to be fully there but maybe tjhe repair
> > sw is confused about what drive to boot or what drive to repair.
> > There is no choice to select a drive to repair that I can see.
> > What next?
> > Suggestions please.  (this is my Media Center TV too)
> 
> It sounds like your hard drive has died. Run a thorough diagnostic on it
> using a utility downloaded from the drive mftr.'s website. If the drive
> fails any physical tests, replace it.
> 
> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Hardware_Tshoot
> 
> Malke
> -- 
> MS-MVP
> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
> FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
> 
>
date: Sat, 11 Oct 2008 16:19:01 -0700   author:   Lorin

Re: Now What? Vista Ultimate Blue Screen   
If you don't want to try any of the good advise offered by others in the 
group and for no apparent reason are dead certain that your drives are just 
being mis-detected then... open computer case, disconnect all drives except 
your boot drive then run the repair from Vista DVD.

Good luck,

Len
"Lorin"  wrote in message 
news:281F046E-9C97-465E-A456-6C54ADD2F6B0@microsoft.com...
> Which drive?
> i.e. how do I identify it from however I look at it.
> It seems that Vista is calling a drive C: when in fact it was never C: but
> D: at least in the recovery scenario.
>
> I have four large drives and I do have the mfr disk Seagate.
> What is the software to test with?
>
> If Vista says it fixed it, then why did it not boot?
> Vista only made one pass at fixing and said it was fixed.
> Maybe it was trying to fix the wrong drive because the drive it says is C:
> never was a boot drive.  So is Vista trying to boot that.  Can it change 
> the
> boot order or change the BIOS to change the order?
> The drive it calls D: was the boot drive C:.
> So what I am looking for is how to know who is doing what so I can know 
> what
> physical drive is called so i can work on what was the C: boot drive.
> Sorry if I am not clearer.
>
>
> "Malke" wrote:
>
>> Lorin wrote:
>>
>> > Crashed with bad disk indicated.
>> > Interestingly I had a few flashes of a solid blue screen once in a 
>> > while
>> > over the past two days.  Must have been a waring of impending doom.
>> > Ran Vista SP1 boot up from CD ( I use F12 to select boot device)
>> > Selected language
>> > selected "Repair Your Computer"
>> > Skipped "Load Drivers"
>> > But I did explore this and saw all drives and folders present.
>> > Ran repair at "Startup Repair"
>> >
>> > Ran successfully.
>> > Checked Diagnostic and Repair Details.
>> > "The Partition Table does not have a valid system partition.
>> > Partition table repair
>> > Completed successfully
>> > Error code 0x0
>> > took 51 sec.
>> >
>> > System Disk=\Device\HardDisk
>> >
>> >  ReStarted on my command
>> >   but still will not boot from hard disk.
>> >
>> > So now the interesting part and maybe where I can get in if someone can
>> > help and or confirms my thoughts.
>> > I have too much to do all over agains and the AUTOMATIC BACKUP kept NOT
>> > running.  Another problem to fix.
>> >
>> > Anyway, looking at the folders when the "Load Driver" opportunity came 
>> > up
>> > during this repair process:
>> > The hard disks are all there but C: was not C:.
>> > The D: shown is actually the C: (boot) drive.
>> > Two other drives looked OK.
>> > What is up with this?
>> > These are all SATA drives.
>> > Do I need to switch cables to the motherboard so the repair process 
>> > sees
>> > the physical C: drive as C: or do I use the BIOS to change things?
>> > As I said earier, all drives seem to be fully there but maybe tjhe 
>> > repair
>> > sw is confused about what drive to boot or what drive to repair.
>> > There is no choice to select a drive to repair that I can see.
>> > What next?
>> > Suggestions please.  (this is my Media Center TV too)
>>
>> It sounds like your hard drive has died. Run a thorough diagnostic on it
>> using a utility downloaded from the drive mftr.'s website. If the drive
>> fails any physical tests, replace it.
>>
>> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Hardware_Tshoot
>>
>> Malke
>> -- 
>> MS-MVP
>> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
>> FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
>>
>>
date: Sat, 11 Oct 2008 22:04:05 -0400   author:   Len Mattix

Re: Now What? Vista Ultimate Blue Screen   
Which Drive. The drive that your system boots from. That drive. It sounds like that (the one that holds your OS and boots) has DIED

-- 
Peter

Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.

"Lorin"  wrote in message news:281F046E-9C97-465E-A456-6C54ADD2F6B0@microsoft.com...
> Which drive?
> i.e. how do I identify it from however I look at it.
> It seems that Vista is calling a drive C: when in fact it was never C: but 
> D: at least in the recovery scenario.
> 
> I have four large drives and I do have the mfr disk Seagate.
> What is the software to test with?
> 
> If Vista says it fixed it, then why did it not boot?
> Vista only made one pass at fixing and said it was fixed.
> Maybe it was trying to fix the wrong drive because the drive it says is C: 
> never was a boot drive.  So is Vista trying to boot that.  Can it change the 
> boot order or change the BIOS to change the order?
> The drive it calls D: was the boot drive C:.
> So what I am looking for is how to know who is doing what so I can know what 
> physical drive is called so i can work on what was the C: boot drive.
> Sorry if I am not clearer.
> 
> 
> "Malke" wrote:
> 
>> Lorin wrote:
>> 
>> > Crashed with bad disk indicated.
>> > Interestingly I had a few flashes of a solid blue screen once in a while
>> > over the past two days.  Must have been a waring of impending doom.
>> > Ran Vista SP1 boot up from CD ( I use F12 to select boot device)
>> > Selected language
>> > selected "Repair Your Computer"
>> > Skipped "Load Drivers"
>> > But I did explore this and saw all drives and folders present.
>> > Ran repair at "Startup Repair"
>> > 
>> > Ran successfully.
>> > Checked Diagnostic and Repair Details.
>> > "The Partition Table does not have a valid system partition.
>> > Partition table repair
>> > Completed successfully
>> > Error code 0x0
>> > took 51 sec.
>> > 
>> > System Disk=\Device\HardDisk
>> > 
>> >  ReStarted on my command
>> >   but still will not boot from hard disk.
>> > 
>> > So now the interesting part and maybe where I can get in if someone can
>> > help and or confirms my thoughts.
>> > I have too much to do all over agains and the AUTOMATIC BACKUP kept NOT
>> > running.  Another problem to fix.
>> > 
>> > Anyway, looking at the folders when the "Load Driver" opportunity came up
>> > during this repair process:
>> > The hard disks are all there but C: was not C:.
>> > The D: shown is actually the C: (boot) drive.
>> > Two other drives looked OK.
>> > What is up with this?
>> > These are all SATA drives.
>> > Do I need to switch cables to the motherboard so the repair process sees
>> > the physical C: drive as C: or do I use the BIOS to change things?
>> > As I said earier, all drives seem to be fully there but maybe tjhe repair
>> > sw is confused about what drive to boot or what drive to repair.
>> > There is no choice to select a drive to repair that I can see.
>> > What next?
>> > Suggestions please.  (this is my Media Center TV too)
>> 
>> It sounds like your hard drive has died. Run a thorough diagnostic on it
>> using a utility downloaded from the drive mftr.'s website. If the drive
>> fails any physical tests, replace it.
>> 
>> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Hardware_Tshoot
>> 
>> Malke
>> -- 
>> MS-MVP
>> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
>> FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
>> 
>>
date: Sun, 12 Oct 2008 00:30:04 -0400   author:   Peter Foldes

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