- Wed Mar 07, 2007 1:54 am
#214162
A really weird one...
After a hard crash (blue screen saying computer has been shut down to avoid damage), I rebooted and it said Windows can't boot because the file vgaoem.fon is missing or damaged. This is a system font file.
So I inserted the XP boot CD, tried pressing R for the recovery console, but it didn't show me any Windows installation. Then I remembered I have my C: drive on a partition on a two harddrive raid 0 setup, so I had to load the raid drivers before pressing R.
(I have a total of 3 disks, 2 in raid 0 with partitions C: and F: (files), and a third disk for backups)
So I loaded first the raid drivers and I got to the recovery console, only now it's telling me it found a Windows installation on D:!
And the disk I use for backups is now suddenly listed as C:. If I plug in this disk, I can't boot up. Says NTLDR can not be found. Obviously it's looking in the wrong drive.
So how can I set back the drives either through bios or something, so that the disk is not seen as C when I plug it in? Is it easier to edit the boot.ini file? But I'm thinking it could screw up a lot of things if I leave Windows booting on the D: partition.
%*$0$% computers.....
After a hard crash (blue screen saying computer has been shut down to avoid damage), I rebooted and it said Windows can't boot because the file vgaoem.fon is missing or damaged. This is a system font file.
So I inserted the XP boot CD, tried pressing R for the recovery console, but it didn't show me any Windows installation. Then I remembered I have my C: drive on a partition on a two harddrive raid 0 setup, so I had to load the raid drivers before pressing R.
(I have a total of 3 disks, 2 in raid 0 with partitions C: and F: (files), and a third disk for backups)
So I loaded first the raid drivers and I got to the recovery console, only now it's telling me it found a Windows installation on D:!
And the disk I use for backups is now suddenly listed as C:. If I plug in this disk, I can't boot up. Says NTLDR can not be found. Obviously it's looking in the wrong drive.
So how can I set back the drives either through bios or something, so that the disk is not seen as C when I plug it in? Is it easier to edit the boot.ini file? But I'm thinking it could screw up a lot of things if I leave Windows booting on the D: partition.
%*$0$% computers.....
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