I'm gonna be brief, cause this problem's burning a hole in my work.
I have an HDD that started acting up and then almost literally broke.
Scenario :
- After a unfriendly reboot (power-outage) the Windows Vista Business (32b) booting procedure gave a message that System.(extension I forgot) was corrupt.
- Restoring to previous configurations (I had 3) did not seem to fix the problem.
- Attempting to install Windows Vista failed 4 times on accounts of "after long periods of time nothing happened (3 hours + of waiting after the Install Now button)"
- Attempting to install Windows 7 succeeded (till after the point of installing updates but before a fresh boot of windows) once till a timeout error.
- I've installed Windows 7(64b) on a HDD I had in one of my old pcs and it booted up just fine with drivers installed and all (without the broken HDD connected to the PC)
- I installed the broken HDD on the system and Windows 7 does not continue (I waited for about 2 hours) after the Starting Windows screen (the loading screen).
- I tried the broken HDD on another pc with Windows XP and it did not go past the loading screen either.
- I tried Windows XP setup on the old pc and waited about 1 hour on the inspecting the broken HDD.
Conclusion :
Obviously the broken HDD is broken, thing is I want the data within. Putting aside horrendous hardware (from the HDD) malfunction, the data should be salvageable. I narrowed down two paths:
1) Obviously, considering that the OP system takes a lot of time to boot with the broken HDD attached, I want to buy an external rack with USB connector, so I can boot the system then hot-swap the hdd into it, hopefully getting access to the data inside.
2) Get a bootable dvd/usb stick etc and have on it something like norton commander or the like, for me to take the data I need, or access disk fixing tools like scandisk and the like.
I'm gonna try option 1 Monday considering it takes a bit of money. Since then I'm looking for suggestions of what to use for path 2, or other options i might have.
I could specify my computer specs, but I doubt they're meaningful considering I've tested the HDD on multiple platforms.
Thanks for reading and I am sorry for my wall of text and I hope I'll get to the bottom of this.
Have fun.
Ronwue.
I have an HDD that started acting up and then almost literally broke.
Scenario :
- After a unfriendly reboot (power-outage) the Windows Vista Business (32b) booting procedure gave a message that System.(extension I forgot) was corrupt.
- Restoring to previous configurations (I had 3) did not seem to fix the problem.
- Attempting to install Windows Vista failed 4 times on accounts of "after long periods of time nothing happened (3 hours + of waiting after the Install Now button)"
- Attempting to install Windows 7 succeeded (till after the point of installing updates but before a fresh boot of windows) once till a timeout error.
- I've installed Windows 7(64b) on a HDD I had in one of my old pcs and it booted up just fine with drivers installed and all (without the broken HDD connected to the PC)
- I installed the broken HDD on the system and Windows 7 does not continue (I waited for about 2 hours) after the Starting Windows screen (the loading screen).
- I tried the broken HDD on another pc with Windows XP and it did not go past the loading screen either.
- I tried Windows XP setup on the old pc and waited about 1 hour on the inspecting the broken HDD.
Conclusion :
Obviously the broken HDD is broken, thing is I want the data within. Putting aside horrendous hardware (from the HDD) malfunction, the data should be salvageable. I narrowed down two paths:
1) Obviously, considering that the OP system takes a lot of time to boot with the broken HDD attached, I want to buy an external rack with USB connector, so I can boot the system then hot-swap the hdd into it, hopefully getting access to the data inside.
2) Get a bootable dvd/usb stick etc and have on it something like norton commander or the like, for me to take the data I need, or access disk fixing tools like scandisk and the like.
I'm gonna try option 1 Monday considering it takes a bit of money. Since then I'm looking for suggestions of what to use for path 2, or other options i might have.
I could specify my computer specs, but I doubt they're meaningful considering I've tested the HDD on multiple platforms.
Thanks for reading and I am sorry for my wall of text and I hope I'll get to the bottom of this.
Have fun.
Ronwue.