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eremini
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Posted:
Sun Jan 28, 2007 4:06 pm |
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PRO New Member
Joined: 28 Jan 2007
Posts: 1
Location: United Kingdom
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Hello,
I had windows XP installed on C: and windows vista on D: and had a dual boot system, with the vista bootloader being on C:. Later I formated C: and reinstalled XP on it, now I want to restore the vista bootloader, so I can boot back into vista. I downloaded VistaBootPRO and did "Reinstall Vista bootloader" but that has no effect whatsoever. it says
There is currently 0 OS(s) installed in the boot manager.
Current timeout before default boots: 0
Default OS:
And when you reboot it still uses the old boot manager. Basically nothing happenes.
Any help would be appreciated
Thanks
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JabbaPapa
Julian Lord |
Posted:
Sun Jan 28, 2007 4:52 pm |
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Respected Member of PROnetworks
Joined: 22 Feb 2004
Posts: 14272
Location: Monte-Carlo
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You should add an entry for Windows Vista, pointing to the drive letter currently used by XP to designate the drive where you have Vista (probably D: , but check first in Windows Explorer)
BTW: Welcome to PROnetworks !!!
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jbullard
Jason Bullard |
Posted:
Sun Jan 28, 2007 6:09 pm |
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Vice President Software
Joined: 06 Jun 2004
Posts: 3233
Location: Utah
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eremini,
The easiest way to fix this problem is to pop in the Vista DVD and do a System Bootloader Repair. This will reinstall the bootloader from within DOS and then fix the errors within your BCD Registry. Once you are able to boot both into Vista and XP I would go into VBP and in the top menu Run Diagnostics and clean up the BCD Registry. This will add any existing entries back into the BCD Registry so you can figure out which ones are correct. If you have any problems with this just let us know and we will be more than happy to help.
The actual bootloader sometimes fails in VBP due to not being able to write to the beginning of the HDD. However, on the flip side it is also dangerous sometimes to use the /force command with bootsect.exe. So the dilemma has always been safety of the users hardware instead of software. It is alot easier to repair the software vs hardware.
HTH,
Jason
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kd1966
Kevin Durbin |
Posted:
Mon Jan 29, 2007 10:00 am |
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Respected Member of PROnetworks
Joined: 08 Aug 2005
Posts: 9172
Location: USA - GSO - NC
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Booting with the Vista DVD, the option is called "Repair My Computer", wheras it used to be called Advanced Startup Repair. It is the option down in the lower left of the screen that has the HUGE Install NOW button.....lol
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