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#11
If you attempted to run Recovery disks and failed after nearly 100% completion then you may no longer have a Win7 installation that is reparable.
To find this out, boot the Win7 Repair CD which Bill linked above, then mark the Win7 partition Active as it should have remained: Partition - Mark as Active
Now boot back into Repair CD, click through to Startup Repair - Run 3 Separate Times with reboots to see if it will repair or write the System MBR to Win7 to start up.
If not, it is likely you have no Win7 to repair. You can check this and attempt to copy out your files following this method to browse the partition using your Repair CD: Copy & Paste - in Windows Recovery Console
Next I would attempt to run the Recovery partition by tapping the key given on first boot screen, in setup literature or in your Manual to run Factory Recovery. Pressing the given key sets the partition Active to boot Recovery to run. You can read your Manual at the Support Downloads webpage for your model computer.
If the Recovery partition won't run then by now you know you have nothing to lose, so I would next wipe the HD to see if the Recovery Disks you made will run to completion without factory code interference: SSD / HDD : Optimize for Windows Reinstallation
If the Recovery Disks refuse to run or complete, then you need to locate a retail install DVD or ISO of Win7 to clean reinstall using the Product Key on the COA sticker attached to your machine. All versions can be unlocked in any retail installer by extracting the ISO using ImgBurn, running the ei.cfg removal tool, then burning DVD or writing to flash stick an all-versions installer to boot to clean install your licensed version.