PW should not only see Win7 but if you want Win7 on D allow you to convert D to Primary, then you can follow these steps to resize into C while recovering the System boot files into Win7 by marking Active and running Startup Repair 3 times: Partition Recover Space Used by an Older OS
Are you following the tutorial above?
I was, until I hit the section where I require Win 7 boot/recovery disk. I have no DVDs atm, and I have no CDs to burn the ISO for PM either.
I guess my outlook has changed slightly in that I if I can get my boot files off C: and on to D: that might suffice - which is what I believe we are doing now by using EasyBCD to move the BOOTMGR
Didn't boot.
All I get is a black screen with a small cursor flashing and nothing. I waited to see if it would ask for a DVD etc. nothing.
Connected it to an external caddy and attached it to another laptop to try and set the active flag back to C: - I had the same issue last night and it fixed it.
Working again. But, C: is back as active now.
Feel like im going in circles, might just format the whole thing and start from fresh.
How and why is startup repair needed when moving starting point of partition (assuming bootmgr, bcd store are already there and partition is active?PW should not only see Win7 but if you want Win7 on D allow you to convert D to Primary, then you can follow these steps to resize into C while recovering the System boot files into Win7 by marking Active and running Startup Repair 3 times: Partition Recover Space Used by an Older OS
Are you following the tutorial above?
Bootmgr, bootsect and bcd are already on D and D partition is active. bcd looks fine as well (BCDEDIT /STORE D:\BOOT\BCD /ENUM ALL)OP installed from C instead of correctly booting the installer, which locked out C and forced installer to choose D for Win7. We see this a lot.
If he wanted to keep Win7 on D, OP was instructed to convert D to Primary so it could be marked Active. This tells WinRe where to write the System boot files.
Once marked Active, he needs to boot into System Recovery Options to run Startup Repair - Run 3 Separate Times with reboots as he was told repeatedly. This is not negotiable with discussions about whether he has a DVD or CD or not.
Once D starts on its own and is marked System Active, he can delete C and recover it's space using Partition Wizard Resize function.
If you now want to clean reinstall then boot the DVD or flash stick installer, use Custom Drive Options to delete all partitions and create new as you wish, install: Clean Install Windows 7
bootsector, bcd store, bootmgr where and are all on D. MBR is good as well, otherwise he can't boot from C either.Startup Repair will write the System boot files to Active partition if run up to 3 separate times with reboots in between.
What D needs is the System flag. It is not yet the System partition.