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Black Screen w/ Cursor - Dual Boot Hyper-V R2
I'll try to make this post clear as I desperately need help. Sorry if I appear terse.
BACKGROUND: System is a desktop with Win 7 Ultimate x64 RTM on SBS 2008 Domain Network. It has worked almost flawlessly since Aug 2009. Dual boots w/ Hyper-V Server R2 (installed prior to Win 7). In boot manager, Hyper-V is E:\ while Win 7 is F:\.
SYMPTOM: I'm getting the oft-described "Black Screen of Death" that started after I did a BIOS update. The update changed my HDD controller from RAID to IDE and I let the computer boot w/o changing it back (I changed it back to RAID when Windows didn't boot). This obviously caused corruption in the MBR. After running repairs (see below), I can now boot into Hyper-V Server R2 with no problems, but Windows 7 makes it to where I should see the log in screen, but only the black screen w/ cursor appears. Here are the particulars:
- Ctl-Alt-Del causes the busy pointer to momentarily appear, then nothing on further attemps.
- Ctl-Shift-Esc does nothing
- Win-P causes the Projector screen to appear. Choosing any option changes nothing.
- All Safe Modes and Last Known Good boot to same black screen.
- No previous system images available (probably due to Dual Boot configuration)
- No other F8 options do anything.
ATTEMPTED REPAIRS: I booted numerous times from the Install disk and ran the tools on it. The System Repair fixed several things including MBR corruption and Registry repair. The last several times it comes up w/ no repairs and tells me the O/S booted successfully. I have also used the boot editors (bcdedit.exe, etc.), which tell me all is well in the MBR.
I'm stumped, and after several days of researching I'm almost desperate enough to do a clean install. However, I almost wonder if Windows is actually loading, but is masked behind the black screen. After Ctl-Alt-Del, I typed in my password, then saw HDD activity like Windows was loading. I also wonder if the Hyper-V R2 is the culprit after the MBR repairs. I thought both systems used the same boot manager, but maybe Hyper-V (which has a lower drive letter) doesn't play w/ Win 7.
Sorry if this is too long and I appreciate any help you can offer.