Had BSOD, fixed that, accidentally set external hard drive as active

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

  1. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Enterprise 64 Bit
       #1

    Had BSOD, fixed that, accidentally set external hard drive as active


    Hello,

    I'm not new to these forums, they've been very helpful to me just browsing through when I have problems. I am new however to signing up. What happened to my computer is, I kept getting the BSOD, I went into safe mode, removed the most recent programs I had installed, and it stopped happening. I then proceeded to plug in my external hard drive. It was not recognizing it for some reason, so I went to disk management. It was listed there, just without a drive letter. I tried to assign it a drive letter, and it gave me an error message saying something about refreshing the list, (this is the error message I should have researched), I tried refreshing the drive list, and tried reassigning the drive letter, same message. I right clicked on the drive again, and I saw mark as active. For some stupid reason, I clicked on this. Then seeing that it didn't do anything, I thought maybe restarting the computer would maybe do the trick. Now my computer won't boot. It gets to the windows logo, and boom, restarts all over again. I tried many things like, startup repair, system restore, marking partition as active CMD, with diskpart, I also tried some of the commands in bootrec.exe. By the way, if this helps at all, my hard drive is a solid state drive, I also have a slave drive in there which does also have a copy of windows installed on it, (it was my old hard drive), I tried setting that as my primary boot and it boots into my old install of windows, before i got my solid state drive. Is there a way I can fix the startup by having access to it from an operating system instead of the recovery environment?

    Thanks in advance for any help.
      My Computer

  2.    #2

    Unplug external, boot into System Recovery Options Command Line to Mark Partition Active on the 100mb System Reserved (preferred if you have it) or C partition. If it won't start run Startup Repair - Run up to 3 Separate Times to repair or rewrite the System boot files.

    Once it boots, plug in the external to Mark Partition as Inactive - Windows 7 Forums.
    Then run a Disk Check. If it fails run Partition Wizard Check File System and Partition Wizard Partition surface test.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Enterprise 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Would this help at all? When startup repair fails and I click on show problem details, it displays;

    Problem signature 01: 6.1.7600.16385
    Problem signature 02: 6.1.7600.16385
    Problem signature 03: unknown
    Problem signature 04: 21200146
    Problem signature 05: ExternalMedia
    Problem signature 06: 10
    Problem signature 07: BadDriver
    OS Version: 6.1.7600.2.0.0.256.1


    I tried doing what you said, and its still the same thing. I have the bootable partition wizard, and I don't have the option to check file system, its greyed out
      My Computer

  4.    #4

    Did you change the Active flag back to where it was? Use Partition Wizard CD to have a picture of what you're doing. You can even post back a camera snap to help us help you better.

    Rightclick System Reserved partition to Modify>Set to Active. If Win7 won't start run 3 Startup Repairs until it starts. If no SysReserved partition mark C Active and do same.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Enterprise 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Here are the pictures of me setting partition active, and here is the ntbtlog

    Sorry, I don't know why the photos came out upside down
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Had BSOD, fixed that, accidentally set external hard drive as active-photo-1.jpg   Had BSOD, fixed that, accidentally set external hard drive as active-photo-2.jpg  
    Had BSOD, fixed that, accidentally set external hard drive as active Attached Files
    Last edited by patatesboy; 13 Jan 2013 at 18:48. Reason: photos
      My Computer

  6.    #6

    Dude you posted an upside down screenshot and obscured the partition sizes so we can't tell what's used.

    If that's the Win7 partition it should be System Active. Is that what it says on the partition? If it won't start then run Partition Wizard Rebuild MBR - Video Help.

    If that doesn't start it then run Startup Repair - Run up to 3 Separate Times.

    Make sure the Win7 HD is set first to boot in BIOS setup, after the CD/DVD drive.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Enterprise 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #7

    I did everything you mentioned, still same thing. It does not say system active on the partition, so I rebuilt mbr. I ran startup repair 3 separate times. Did that text file I posted have any information on what point the startup crashes?
      My Computer

  8.    #8

    Does it say System Active on partition now after running the 3 repairs?

    If not start at the top and work through the steps which include everything possible for Troubleshooting Windows 7 Failure to Start
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Enterprise 64 Bit
    Thread Starter
       #9

    no it does not say system active. I'm following the steps on the link you provided.
      My Computer

  10.    #10

    Then I'd next run SFC /SCANNOW Run in Command Prompt at Boot to see if repairing damaged System Files is enough to start it by marking Active and running the Repairs. But it's pretty grim if it won't even accept the Active flag or respond to repairs. Does it show an installation to Repair?

    Can you browse in via PW CD Explore funciton to see your files and the Windows files are still onboard? You can rescue your files in Step 9 of tutorial.

    Next I'd try the Bootrec.exe tool in the Windows Recovery Environment to troubleshoot and repair startup issues in Windows sequencing commands as given in the link in tutorial.
      My Computer


 
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

  Related Discussions
Our Sites
Site Links
About Us
Windows 7 Forums is an independent web site and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Microsoft Corporation. "Windows 7" and related materials are trademarks of Microsoft Corp.

© Designer Media Ltd
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 19:38.
Find Us