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Thank you theog, i have just seen the similar thread also .
Thank you theog, i have just seen the similar thread also .
Although it requires buying the "Partition Wizard Professional Edition" (rather than using the "free" version), it is now possible to boot standalone Partition Wizard from USB flash drive.
So you can boot either from its standalone CD or its standalone flash drive, whichever or both you create.
When you buy PW Professional (current price $29) they will send you an email containing the license key as well as a download link for "Partition Wizard Bootable Media Builder". You run this second product and specify whether you'd like to build a standalone bootable CD and/or a standalone bootable USB flash drive.
Here's the description of the flash drive version.
Just another thought for the future, to make sure your "arsenal of tools and weapons" is complete enough to cope with all unexpected situations and needs.
Thank you for all support
:)
This is a disastrous thread because of refusal to heed the advice of those who knew it was going to go wrong from long experience.
The procedure when trying to construct a System Reserved partition (when there is good reason - for which there isn't here for reasons already given) is to mark it Active and run Startup Repair 3 times to write the System boot files onto the partition. This has been done hundreds of times here, whereas using EasyBCD to construct SysReserved is not a solution I ever recall us using, just as using PW Rebuild MBR won't do the job correctly since neither can enable the Repair console on F8 tools menu.
To rescue your Dual boot, Use your Win7 DVD Repair console or Repair CD: System Repair Disc - Create. To not have prepared one for an experimental process is reckless.
If you cannot boot a disk, then write the DVD ISO to flash stick using UltraISO trial version: On File tab Open DVD or ISO, on Bootable Tab select Write Disk Image, Format, Write. Boot stick under USB, Removable or HD's.
Boot the DVD/CD preferably, or stick, or tap F8 key repeatedly at bootup to choose Repair My Computer, on first screen press Shift + F10 or click through to System Recovery Options to open a Command Prompt, type:
DISKPART
LIST DISK
SEL Disk 0 (confirm this is Win7 HD)
LIST PART
Sel Part 1 (confirm this is XP partition)
Active
Exit
Now close Command Box, proceed to Second screen of Repair My Computer to check for Win7 installation, accept any offered Repair, if none offered click through to Recovery Tools list to run Startup Repair with reboots until Win7 starts.