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#31
So what now? Should I try restoring it again? I'm worried that it will do the same all over again.
So what now? Should I try restoring it again? I'm worried that it will do the same all over again.
E (Music) is working fine as before? You can keep letter E or change the drive letter to any other free drive letter. Since when did you have this problem with MUSIC 465GB volume? I think the recovery procedure was confused because of the new disk(?) Any idea who did make it hidden? If it's working fine.... detach the drive from system when doing the recovery... so you're 1000% sure it doesn't interfere with the process.
In elevated command prompt:
Post files c:\bcd.txt and c:\bcd_f.txt. You may delete them after successful postCode:bcdedit /enum all > c:\bcd.txt bcdedit /store f:\boot\bcd /enum all > c:\bcd_f.txt
Last edited by Kaktussoft; 06 Jan 2014 at 10:41.
As seen on you screenshot the disk has 2 partitions:
Very strange they made the windows7 partition part of bootmenu and real win7. If that partition becomes faulty, for example the file system is corrupt..... then you can't show the boot menu and recover!!! And F8->repair your computer is displayed, but not workming. That's why I want to see your boot menu entries. c:\bcd.txt will have them.
- Partition type 27 so "hidden" OEM RECOVERY HIDDEN (changed to NTFS [type 07]). It is not part of the boot sequence
- Windows7 partition. It is ACTIVE, so has bootmanager and bootmenu. In bootmenu is 1 option (so not shown) to boot to windows7 partition. It has also a recovery option that in case you do "repair your computer" .... the recoverybootsequence boot entry will be activated which should point to some startfile on the 12GB partition.
and c:\bcd_f.txt has the boot menu if you force a boot from 12GB partition. Most likely that's untouched. A recovery partition is static usally.
I gonna clone some settings from F (read from bcd_f.txt) to the active boot menu
I made a mistake. This is the correct command
Code:bcdedit /store f:\boot\bcd /enum all > c:\bcd_f.txt