A client of mine had a working win 2000 professional machine that needs some work - in order to be safe and to provide more capacity I did a disk clone onto a larger drive. The existing system has two drives. I used Acronix disk director (running from the CD in Linux) to clone the first drive [single partition] onto a new drive.
The new drive was then placed as the first drive and the old drive removed. The system would not boot - just a message about no drives. I put the original drive back, removed the new drive and it no longer booted.
However, I found if the machine is started with the win2000 install CD in place, then it starts and all is fine.
I played with recover console and fixmbr does not fix anything. Fixboot does not fix anything, but actually corrupted the drive - adding a lot of empty space at the start of the drive, and adding two new partitions, one cryptic and one labelled Novell.
I went back and recloned the old drive and for some reason this did not work quite as nicely as the first time, and gave me an NTLDR error, recovery console fixmbr -- took care of that, but I still need the win2k setup CD in the drive in order to boot.
The new drive was then placed as the first drive and the old drive removed. The system would not boot - just a message about no drives. I put the original drive back, removed the new drive and it no longer booted.
However, I found if the machine is started with the win2000 install CD in place, then it starts and all is fine.
I played with recover console and fixmbr does not fix anything. Fixboot does not fix anything, but actually corrupted the drive - adding a lot of empty space at the start of the drive, and adding two new partitions, one cryptic and one labelled Novell.
I went back and recloned the old drive and for some reason this did not work quite as nicely as the first time, and gave me an NTLDR error, recovery console fixmbr -- took care of that, but I still need the win2k setup CD in the drive in order to boot.