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| Gateway XP MCE CD I have a Gateway FX510XL. I was looking for some drivers so I put the Gateway MCE CD in. The cd came up in recovery mode and the only options available were full format or full format with backup. I was not looking to reformat my drive so I chose quit. The computer rebooted and went in to recovery again. Now all it does is reboot to recovery and offer the option to reformat or quit. I took and XP cd for my laptop and booted from it. If I choose install it replys that there are no disks on the system. I have 2 Hitachi 500 gb drives and I had them tested and they're fine. Does anyone know what the Gateway recovery disk did to my system? How can I get the pc to recognize the hard drives again? Thanks, Bruce |
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| Re: Gateway XP MCE CD Each PC manufacturer has a different way to handle such things. Some provide real CDs, but other porovide CDs that only contain small programs that cause a hidden partition of data on the hard drive to be used to restore C:\. Your best bet is to contact Gateway support. As a minimum they should be able to tell you how to restore the PC to the day you bought it. They owe you that. As for getting the PC working without completing the restore, Gateway might be able to help. Ask then whether what you did so far formatted the hard drive, or deleted partitions, etc. If yes, the odds of fixing are very small, other than to complete the restoration process. But, be aware that there are some third-party programs that can unformat a disk or restore lost partitions. These work only if nothing has been written to the hard drive since the format or the partition delete. Note that a long-format does write to the disk, but a short format only erases the pointers to files. Gateway should know which, if either, their restoration CD invokes. A local PC repair shop might know about these and for a small diagnostic fee might be able to tell you whether there is some hope. You might alos learn something by Goggling "parititon undelete". As for the use of an XP CD to examine the hardware, if it was provided by a different PC maker, it might be specific to the hardware of that other PC. That is, not all XP CDs are equal. For example, SATA hard drive controllers require special drivers. A PC maker may include those with their XP CD. But, those drivers will only work on their hardware, not on a random PC. In contrast, the full retail verison of XP provides no such drivers, but provides the option to hit F6 and load them from a floppy (yes a floppy, not a CD). A way to get around the limitations of XP CDs is to download and burn a "live" LINUX CD. "Live" means that LINUX will run from the CD, without installing anything on the hard drive. KNOPPIX is among the best, supporting most hardware, and has a windows-like (really MAC-like) interface. It is free, but it is a large download, about 700 Meg. Be sure to burn to a CD using a program like Nero or Easy CD Creator, which supports "burn from image" or similar. Do not simple drag&drop the ISO file to a CD. That won't work. Links to KNOPPIX: http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index-en.html http://www.knoppix.net/wiki/Main_Page http://www.knoppix.net/wiki/Rescue_FAQ If KNOPPIX can see the disks, then they have some normal format (e.g., FAT32, NTFS). If it can see data, then they have not been reformated. If it can see data, then it can also recover data, by simply copying to an external hard drive (USB or firewire), flash drive, ZIP, etc. KNOPPIX also comes with a CD burner. If KNOPPIX does not see the disks, then they may have temporarily be give some unusual format. More likely the format bit in the boot record was changed as part of the restoration process. Some software does this to prevent other programs from operating on the disk while they are using it. In such a case a solution can be to fix that format bit. I would suggest a good PC repair shop. But, there are programs on the web that offer to do this, for power users who know what they are doing. <brucegengler********.com> wrote in message news:1176638109.812168.145050@y5g2000hsa.googlegro ups.com... >I have a Gateway FX510XL. I was looking for some drivers so I put the > Gateway MCE CD in. The cd came up in recovery mode and the only > options available were full format or full format with backup. I was > not looking to reformat my drive so I chose quit. The computer > rebooted and went in to recovery again. Now all it does is reboot to > recovery and offer the option to reformat or quit. > > I took and XP cd for my laptop and booted from it. If I choose > install it replys that there are no disks on the system. I have 2 > Hitachi 500 gb drives and I had them tested and they're fine. > > Does anyone know what the Gateway recovery disk did to my system? How > can I get the pc to recognize the hard drives again? > > Thanks, Bruce > |
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