Solved Main drive partition reading as "System Reserved" partition

Ok, Now we're getting somewhere:

Thats the result of a "quick" scan. It will not allow me to select all 3 partitions, however. I can either select the 2 existing partitions or the 3rd discovered partition, so either way its telling me its going to delete some partitions.

Thanks for the help so far by the way, its progress.
Now wait a minute... you don't really have to lose anything, I don't think.

First, you can double-click on that "lost/deleted" partition to see what's in it. In other words you can Explore it, and confirm that it's usable and contains Windows as you expect it should.

Then, you can use Partition Wizard to COPY a partition in its entirety to another location (free space on some other drive). So you could copy off the (a) "system reserved" partition and (b) "recovery" partition to your MyBook or somewhere, and then you could recover this "lost/deleted" partition. You don't have to fear losing these two now, since you have them copied to another drive.

Then you could then use Partition Wizard to resize/move the recovered lost/deleted Windows partition, to create unallocated space on this drive, and then you could COPY BACK those two previously saved partitions, and you would have reconstructed all three usable partitions on this drive.

Now you still then must mark the "system reserved" as "active", in order to be able to boot from that drive.

This sounds plausible, and PW is the right tool. You just need to copy off the two partitions you currently do have, to ensure you don't lose them when recovering that "lost/deleted" partition.

That's my thought.
 

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Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
I've got to run out for a while, but I think you seem to have the situation under control... and also seem to have instantly picked up how PW can be used. It's very very useful, and very very clever, and very very powerful.

Note that you can also boot to the standalone boot CD (burned from the downloaded ISO) and you can do everything you are doing right now from under Win7, but booted to the [Linux] CD. Same exact GUI, except no Windows drive letters of course. So you need to be able to recognize the partitions by their labels or other characteristics.

The standalone boot CD is required when working on your Win7 C-partition, but otherwise the installed Win7 version can be used (as you're doing now) to work on other partitions. Many users just feel more comfortable using the standalone boot CD for everything, but I'm a "no guts, no glory" kind of guy when it comes to PW... especially when I have taken backups (or copied partitions as I suggested above) to ensure no loss of data in the event of an unexpected disaster or surprise.


I'll be back later, to check and see how you've done... and if PW has been your saviour.

Good luck.
 

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Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6...8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
I have a simular question/problem... Should 'Recovery' (Partition 1) or 'Primary' (Partition 2) be set as 'Active'?
 

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Windows 7 32bit
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Toshiba C655-S5132
OS
Windows 7 32bit
Well I outta be able to carry out that process, but when I came home to continue working I discovered that PW won't install on my home workstation. Now I'm kicking various things and looking into other options that don't involve tearing my office apart. Why do these things have OS-checks? I never hurt anyone!

Anyway as I search for a way to make PW work under 2k3 or break down and get one of my old XP rigs hooked up I'll keep you posted.

Thanks! At the very least I can data-recover the lost information and do a windows re-install now.
 

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You want to always use the PW boot CD so you have rescue-ability.

You'll need to study the sectors recovered to see whether you can afford to give up one of the partitions it says it wants to overwrite.

You can lose the System Reserved partition if necessary, then Modify>Set to Active and run Startup Repair - Run 3 Separate Times on C to write the System boot files to C until it starts on its own.

The deletion then Recovery of C might have damaged System files or the File System. From the DVD or System Repair Disk Command Line run SFC -SCANNOW Run in Command Prompt at Boot and Disk Check if necessary.
 
Well I could easily loose the recovery partition as well, I'm frankly not even sure what its still doing there, except that maybe this was an upgrade-install instead of a fresh one. But the recovery partition is for vista and thus of no value.

I might just loose the other 2 partitions then. I could even expand the main partition, the user has been inkling for a little extra space.
 

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I might just loose the other 2 partitions then. I could even expand the main partition, the user has been inkling for a little extra space.
But as was alluded to, the fact that the third partition on the drive appears to be "lost/delete", and didn't actually even show up as "unallocated space", this strongly suggests some kind of inconsistent or overlapping boundary limits with the two partitions which are supposedly ok.

In other words the reason PW is warning you that something's gotta give in order for the lost/deleted partition to be recovered is that it obviously cannot just bring it back to life and still retain the other two partitions. Something is inconsistent about the three partitions together, and clearly something bad happened to this drive. Honestly no guarantee that the big Win7 partition is still in decent shape, but only some research will determine that.. after you bring it back to life.

Since one or both of these two partitions appear left-justified in PW's graphical representation of the drive, and yet the recovery wizard shows it as residing between the two partitions (which is a very reasonable geometry for how that drive originally looked) there's honestly a possibility that some corruption has occurred on the Win7 partition because of the partition boundary overlap as the other two appear now. Unknown just yet.

That's why I wanted you to double-click on the lost/deleted partition in PW to at least let it see if the file system was hopefully still intact and usable, although I suppose it could appear that way and yet there's still damage to the data area itself.

There certainly was some strange going's on with this disk.


Anyway, if you do want to just take a few minutes and preserve the "system reserved" and "recovery" partitions, just shrink your partition on the MyBook drive to produce some "unallocated" space. Then you can use PW to COPY the two partitions from Disk3 over to the unallocated space on MyBook. Then you've got them there, and don't have to worry at all about letting PW recover the lost/deleted partition and do whatever it wants in order to deliver it to you, including wiping them both out in order to give you back the large Win7 lost/deleted partition.

Once it's recovered, as I suggested earlier you can now move/re-size (if necessary) as you want to free up space for the two preserved partition. You can then recreate the "system reserved" partition and "recovery" partitions on this disk again by just COPY back from MyBook where you preserved them to their original home on Disk3.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6...8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
Well currently I am having to jump through some frustrating hoops. I was doing all the work with PW on my work computer which runs XP pro, my home workstation runs on Server 2003, which means PW doesn't. I'm not about to shell out $130 just because some software designer decided to add an OS-check to his program.

Anyway after an hour of fiddling around with tweaks attempting to bypass the OS-check on PW I just broke down and got out one of my spare XP boxes and booted it up. Unfortunately this means I first have to install some heavy-duty antivirus software on that machine since the drive I am attempting to salvage first started acting funny as the result of several nasty viruses.

Once I finish the AV install/update I'll try and save the System Reserved partition, the recovery partition can go fly a kite for all I care, its not needed. If I can I will try and retrieve the lost partition and put back the system reserved, mark it all properly, then take it back to work with me tomorrow and try it in the laptop. If I get access to the partition I'm also going to back up all the data. Worst-case scenario I do a fresh win-7 install and we're back in buisness as long as the files survive.

The virus that started all of this was(I believe) Tidserve, and it had infected the Master Boot Record.

I'm going to try and rebuild my data-recovery workstation later(its been in a sad state of disrepair) and this time put XP on it, then I think PW will be a handy tool for my arsenal.
 

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Did you read my comment that you must use the PW boot CD to be fail-safe and have rescue-ability in case Windows fails to boot?
 
I'm working with the drive outside of the computer(plugged in via USB to an entirely different machine on an entirely different operating system).
 

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All installed Partition Managers including PW can fail. PW Boot CD will not fail.
 
True. Maybe i'd best wait until I have the laptop to work with directly. Trouble is I pulled the drive because the laptop it was in wasn't being very reliable either(overheating and such). Hard to say what's better off, here. Potentially failable software on a host machine or a potentially failable laptop.
 

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I first mentioned this when you complained that PW would not install on your XP machine. It's boot disk will work anyway no matter how the HD is connected now. You might need to plug it in directly to mobo (if you have the connector) to get full functionality but I believe a USB connection will work for most functions.
 
Yes but my XP machine has no monitor/keyboard/mouse, I am only RDPd into it from my workstation, upon which I cannot install PW because its running 2003. These OS-checks are really very infuriating.
 

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Just in passing, I mention that the PW standalone boot CD is a Linux system. There currently is no way to "add drivers" for unsupported devices, such as a 3rd-party USB 3.0 PCIe adapter card.

So if you do have a USB 3.0 adapter you shouldn't connect the external USB drive through it. Remain with the standard USB 2.0 connectors when you're using the PW standalone boot CD.

This is an interesting subject. I just ran into it with Macrium Reflect Free, which has both a Linux and WinPE version of its standalone boot CD. The WinPE version is far more flexible and useful, since it is possible to incorporate "added drivers" manually at boot time of the CD for the "unsupported hardware" in standard WinPE.

I've been so satisfied with the product that I decided to pay what I felt to be a reasonable price for their "Standard" (non-free) version, which enhances the WinPE boot CD construction process to actually incorporate all of your existing drivers (e.g. for this Transcend PDU3 USB 3.0 PCIe adapter) onto the WinPE boot CD when it is created. So when you boot to it, all of your same Win7-supported devices are instantly supported in the standalone environment. No need to manually add drivers at CD boot time, since they're already in that WinPE.

I'd like to see Partition Wizard's standalone boot CD functionality eventually offer the same WinPE option, rather than just the Linux version, for specifically this reason... in order to access USB 3.0 external drives if you have them.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6...8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
Well I ended up successfully repairing the partitions with PW, so we're back on track with that. Unfortunately the windows instalation is too badly damaged to recover(remember it had a BAD virus infestation) so fortunately the disk is fully readable and I am going to data recover then reformat/reinstall.

Thank you all for the help, especially introducing me to Partition Wizard, it'll be a valuable tool from now on. I'll mark this thread as resolved.
 

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