Unusual Password Situation Assistance Needed

Lautermilch

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I have a customer with six Dell Optiplex 745 PCs. All the admin passwords were reset and I don't know them.

The problem is the machine is not a Windows 7 machine from the Dell website so no drivers for boot images. I have tried a few. The Linux ones do work.

So what I tried.

1. Ophcrack: Got a few of the machines. I then got all the tables you can get and verified they were running but cannot guess the passwords of the rest of the PCs. The pay libraries are $1k so that is out of the question.

2. Hiren's bood CD. Won't work as no driver for the controller.

3. Asunsoft Password recovery (trial but would pay the $20) could not see controller.

So here is my question: If I install the HD as a second drive in a working Win7 PC, can I edit the registry on the second drive and remove the admin password as I have seen in the Linux rescue images. I would rather work in a Win envion as opposed to Linux doing registry editing
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 64 bit

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Employer provided Dell Latitude
OS
W7 Pro SP1 64bit
CPU
i7
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Intel HD Graphics
Hard Drives
crappy SSD
Antivirus
Employer mandated Symantec Endpoint Protection
Browser
Pale Moon 64bit, IE11 64bit & Chrome 64bit
No, thanks. I want to stay in a Windows environment. So my question is if I hook up the drives as a 2nd drive in a working win7 PC can I edit the registry of the 2nd drive?
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 64 bit
Staying in the Windows environment will add a considerable amount of time to the password reset process. If you have concerns about the integrity of that software, that same tutorial is full of other ways to reset passwords - including editing the registry. That said, methods that involve regedit also involve WinRE. I don't know of a way to complete the entire process without using some other environment.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Employer provided Dell Latitude
OS
W7 Pro SP1 64bit
CPU
i7
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Intel HD Graphics
Hard Drives
crappy SSD
Antivirus
Employer mandated Symantec Endpoint Protection
Browser
Pale Moon 64bit, IE11 64bit & Chrome 64bit
Staying in the Windows environment will add a considerable amount of time to the password reset process. If you have concerns about the integrity of that software, that same tutorial is full of other ways to reset passwords - including editing the registry. That said, methods that involve regedit also involve WinRE. I don't know of a way to complete the entire process without using some other environment.


My question is: I take a Windows 7 drive out of a machine, add it to a working machine that has Win7 running as a 2nd drive, let's say 'd:'. I would think I could then open and edit the registry on the 'D:' drive and remove the password, save it, move the drive back to its machine, and boot. I cannot use the Windows Re method since it does not see the drive in the first machine.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 64 bit

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
CPU
AMD Phenom 2 1090T
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-890FXA-UD5
Memory
2x8GB Kingston HyperX Fury Black 1600Mhz Unganged
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Sound Card
Realtek On-Board HD 7.1 Audio / Logitech G35
Monitor(s) Displays
3xAcer GD245HQ
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro 512GB SSD - OS /
WD Caviar Black SATA 3 - 1 TBx2 - Dynamic RAID 0 /
WD Caviar Green SATA 2 - 640GBx2 - Dynamic RAID 0 /
WD Caviar Green SATA 2 - 640GB - Internal Backup /
Seagate Barracude SATA 3 - 3TB - External Backup/ Sync
PSU
HighPower 1000W
Case
Cooler Master HAF 932
Cooling
Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
Logitech G19
Mouse
Logitech G500
Internet Speed
100/4 Mbit Cable (100GB quota)
Antivirus
ZoneAlarm Extreme Security / MBAM Pro / MBAE Free / SAS Free
Browser
IE 11 - Firefox - Chrome
Other Info
Logitech F710/ G27/ G940/ Z5500 // TrackIR 5 // Nvidia 3D Surround Vision
This would be simpler if you would use/trust option five. It does not use WinRE.You don't need to know anything about Linux to use that option. It is just menu driven steps to blank out a password. The is an option to edit the registry manually, but you don't need that.

If you are dead set on sticking with windows, look at the tutorial once again. There are two links under option four. You should be able to modify the steps to avoid WinRE.


edit: I see that GokAy posted the first link that is under option four in the tut that I originally linked to.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Employer provided Dell Latitude
OS
W7 Pro SP1 64bit
CPU
i7
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Intel HD Graphics
Hard Drives
crappy SSD
Antivirus
Employer mandated Symantec Endpoint Protection
Browser
Pale Moon 64bit, IE11 64bit & Chrome 64bit
I always use Option 5 too, at least try it first.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
CPU
AMD Phenom 2 1090T
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-890FXA-UD5
Memory
2x8GB Kingston HyperX Fury Black 1600Mhz Unganged
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G
Sound Card
Realtek On-Board HD 7.1 Audio / Logitech G35
Monitor(s) Displays
3xAcer GD245HQ
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro 512GB SSD - OS /
WD Caviar Black SATA 3 - 1 TBx2 - Dynamic RAID 0 /
WD Caviar Green SATA 2 - 640GBx2 - Dynamic RAID 0 /
WD Caviar Green SATA 2 - 640GB - Internal Backup /
Seagate Barracude SATA 3 - 3TB - External Backup/ Sync
PSU
HighPower 1000W
Case
Cooler Master HAF 932
Cooling
Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
Logitech G19
Mouse
Logitech G500
Internet Speed
100/4 Mbit Cable (100GB quota)
Antivirus
ZoneAlarm Extreme Security / MBAM Pro / MBAE Free / SAS Free
Browser
IE 11 - Firefox - Chrome
Other Info
Logitech F710/ G27/ G940/ Z5500 // TrackIR 5 // Nvidia 3D Surround Vision
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