![]() |
|
IL-2 Sturmovik: Cliffs of Dover Latest instalment in the acclaimed IL-2 Sturmovik series from award-winning developer Maddox Games. |
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I partitioned my drive the usual way (Right click on - my computer - etc)
I went to re-boot and got the -BOOTMGR, press ctl alt dlt to restart- error Basically, I made a small crappy partition, which did not even name or assign a letter to, and the computer decides that it is a good idea to boot up with that one instead of the C: Drive which my OS is intstalled on causing this error. I basically need to now how I can get it back to normal (And no I have never made a system restore point, but i have learned the lesson now). I need to know how to boot up using C again, and then how to delete this hellspawned partition. I AM ABSOLUTELY LOSING IT BECAUSE ASUS HAS THEIR OWN BIOS AND I CAN ONLY SELECT TO BOOT FROM THE HD NOT DIFFERENT PARTITONS, ALL THE DATA IS STILL THERE, I JUST CANT GET IT TO BOOT THE C DRIVE BY DEFAULT!!!!!!!!!!! The windows 7 64bit disk is in the drive, I have tried repair, system restore, and going to install windows where i can neither delete or format the partition. I'm tearing my hair out here on this stupid Mac I am forced to use. lol. Whoever can help me will be in my eternal gratitude!!! If you do reply please give DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS!!! This is the dark side of the PC that I have never ventured to before apart from one time before this to overclock my CPU. Act like I'm an 8 year old. Specs: Asus motherboard (Brand new one with fancy BIOS), 16Gb ram, GTX 580 3GB, 1000W power supply, i7 2600k overclocked to 4.4Ghz THANKS!!!!!!! TBD Last edited by The Black Death; 04-01-2012 at 06:23 PM. |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
If you are prevented from doing a fresh install, I think I would try a fresh install of a previous OS, and creating the partition at that time. Then going to a fresh Win7 install retaining the partition...there may be other options to save your system, but I cannot help with that.
__________________
GigaByteBoard...64bit...FX 4300 3.8, G. Skill sniper 1866 32GB, EVGA GTX 660 ti 3gb, Raptor 64mb cache, Planar 120Hz 2ms, CH controls, Tir5 |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Go into the BIOS and select the partition with windows on to boot from.
__________________
i5 2500k - Asus P8P67Pro - Crucial M4 64GB - 8GB DDR3 - Geforce Ti 560 1GB - Xonar DG - W7 X64 SP1 |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The little partition you trying to remove, includes the Windows Bootloader, so its a bad Idea.
So you should use Bootrec.exe for the first repair attempt http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927392 if this not work you should use TESTDISK (If TESTDISK doesn't do the trick, bye bye Data ![]() http://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk Last edited by FG28_Kodiak; 04-01-2012 at 01:53 PM. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
you could try a program called g-parted to get rid of the new partition. Then once you've done that try booting.
if that doesn't work, you could try the windows repair disc again. no need to lose all your data though. if you've got another pc/laptop handy you could plug that hard drive into it and access it from within the OS of the other pc to recover data you want to keep, then reformat and install windows fresh. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
what he said
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
That's what I would try too. If you've overclocked by adjusting settings in your bios before then you probably know how to get into it at startup (by pressing delete or some such thing). In your bios you should find some boot priority settings that will hopefully allow you select the partition you have Windows installed on as the first boot device.
While I'm here, have you considered not partitioning at all and using separate drives instead? Physical hard-drives and even the smaller SSD's aren't as expensive as they used to be and using them can provide more storage, performance and data safety benefits than partitioning. If you have a choice in the matter I'd say that'd be the way to go. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I can't because I don't no how to get to the blue screen BIOS with asus. With that I can only select to boot the Hard Drive or DVD, not individual partitions
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Again, good advice but how am I supposed to download a program if I cant access my C: drive OS
|
![]() |
|
|