ok on my computer i have 2 hard disks, one ide which was originally my boot disk and a sata disk that was set up as a secondary.
I was planning to so a new install on the sata and set that up as my primary once i got a new motherboard and video card however i cant wait till i get them now as my xp has stuffed up.
The ide drive has 3 partitions on it, once consisting of the os and programs, another has photos and videos and the other has been wiped. 300gb disk
The sata drive has 4 partitions on there. one for the new os, one for my games, one for music and one for my movies. 750gb disk
i have just found a better iso burning prog and am tryin a newly burnt disc to see if that makes a difference. if not im not sure what i can do as its hard to see from dos as to what is where on my drives. might have to find me a lil linux system.
well the new disc didnt work still coming up with the same error. looks like i have to try something different.
Wow, your the partition KING!
Im not sure if your aware, but you really shouldn't partition any hard drive more than 5 times, and not perform more than 10 partition editing commands in a drives LIFETIME. Setting up a blank hard disc using partition tools should really be done once, and the drive to be blank when doing it. editing these with data on them can be dangerous, with nasty results.
I know what is going on with your drive, and you've simply setup and edited the discs too many times with data and OS's on them. You should keep one hard disk for frequently accessed data, such as movies, files, photos, torrent downloading, and setup the second disc (preferrable the smaller one, with a faster Cache, and higher RPM rating) for all your OS's. This is the one that you need to wipe COMPLETELY clean. setup your partitions, install each OS, ending with win7. It will automatically setup your dual boot options, so no need to worry. After the 3 are installed, dont re-partition/or resize that disk anymore! Microsoft throws away literally thousands of discs because of the partition editing tests, and what they do to the drives over time.
I know the above sounds like alot of work, but is absolutely necessary, and will pay off with a forever stable system that you won't ever have to partition again; not to mention the absence of these kinds of failures.