Not totally related to this exact issue, but...
I recently had a customer with a Compaq desktop that originally shipped with a 60GB drive. Long story short, he had to pay $30 for the recovery CDs, which don't even work with the new 250GB drive (it was on sale). The reason? Their restore CDs installed XP SP0, which didn't support large drives. Since it's not an "install" CD, I can't slipstream SP2 into it. On top of it all, Compaq refuses to do anything about this.
Some of the lies that Compaq presented:
- The motherboard will not support that large of a drive
- The QuickRestore CD is not recognizing the full size of the drive
- They cannot patch the original Quick Restore CD because this would be a violation of their license with MS
- If they were to patch the Quick Restore, it would "convert the OEM CD to a Retail version" which would also violate the MS license
- They would not send any of the software separately, because they cannot send me another license for the software.
Needless to say, they are idiots. No wonder the "laptop" CD costs more... because it's better, right?
Don't get me wrong, I am not simply Compaq-bashing, they are simply the latest idiots I have had to deal with. I have had similar dealings with HP, Gateway, IBM, Sony, Dell, etc. They're all idiots.
Sorry for the rant...
Bottom line is that you have no choice but to buy their CDs. Honestly, if you have a COA sticker that says "OEM" on it, I would recommend "obtaining" a suitable CD for XP or whatever it is, and installing it yourself.
Lastly, this installation of recovery on the HD means that you need to burn CDs to get your own recovery disks. By creating this loophole, they eliminate the need to send you a CD... so you could ask, why didn't you burn your CDs? At least, that's their argument.