Mobes Posted September 9, 2011 Share Posted September 9, 2011 (edited) Hello - Looking to get some help regarding a problem just encountered. Background - I just recently replaced my HDD on a Compaq R3240 from a 60gb ATA to WD 250gb ATA. I used the DVD I created which installed Win XP Pro and Office 2003. I also used it to partition the HDD to 125gb and left the remaining space unformatted. BTW, the DVD I created was with great assistance from people on this website!I had decided I wanted to utilize the remaining space on the disk to install Win 7, but wanted to format the HDD using a Gparted disk I have. I was unable to boot from that CD as well as attempting to try my UBCD4WIN cd and also trying my original XP DVD. In all cases, the BIOS seemed to ignore the CD/DVD drive and continued to boot to Windows. I entered setup and selected boot from the CD/DVD and the same thing happened. Also, the CD/DVD drive worked fine prior to all of this and also had no problem installing Win XP. When attempting each CD/DVD I could hear the disk spinning and I would get a black screen with a blinking cursor, but then it would just continue to Windows.The BIOS is up to date according to the Compaq website as well as the CD/DVD drive. I'm not sure where to go from here?? Can anyone give me additional direction?SOLVED: SummaryThanks to Ponch and jaclazz for their help! My laptop now is able to recognize bootable disks at startup by using Grub4DOS. I used the following menu.lst timeout 1 title Boot CD/DVD cdrom --init map --hook chainloader (cd0) rootnoverify (cd0) ThanksMobes Edited September 17, 2011 by Mobes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 9, 2011 Author Share Posted September 9, 2011 One thing I forgot was after my install, I was unable to find an SM BUS controller driver. So that is still showing as a ? in my device manager. I have the NVIDIA Geforce 440 go 64m chipset. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted September 9, 2011 Share Posted September 9, 2011 When you are in XP, does the drive read the disks correctly?You can and should install 7 from within XP. This way it doesn't hijack the drive it's on and name it C:\. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 9, 2011 Author Share Posted September 9, 2011 Hi XIt does read the drives correctly. Although, I just noticed that I show a Drive D: DVD/CD-RW and a Drive E: CD Drive. I don't recall having the 2nd optical Drive. I understand about installing Win 7 within XP. I didn't even try my Win 7 disk. I figure none of the other disks are booting including the XP disk I used to reinstall my Win XP.I'm really trying to figure out why these disks will not boot in case I should need to be able to use Gpart or UBCD4WIN.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted September 9, 2011 Share Posted September 9, 2011 I don't know why your bootable disks are not booting. Hopefully someone else can offer some assistance.You don't need Gparted to make your W7 partition. You can simply use Disk Management (Start > Run > diskmgmt.msc) or I believe if you run the W7 setup.exe from within XP it will format the unpartitioned space for you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 9, 2011 Author Share Posted September 9, 2011 Thanks X. I believe you're right about the disk management and Win 7 setup. I guess I've just gotten into the habit of using Gparted before installing. I really want to fix my issue with the bootable disks before I do anything else.I've never ran into this before.Mobes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allen2 Posted September 10, 2011 Share Posted September 10, 2011 I'd try to either remove the hard drive from the boot in the bios or remove it physically and see what happen when booting from a cd/dvd (i'd set only boot options in bios to only try CD/dvd and nothing else). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dencorso Posted September 10, 2011 Share Posted September 10, 2011 allen2 is right. We need to establish whether the DVD drive is still able to boot or not. If you can disable the HDD on BIOS, and set the machine to boot solely from the DVD drive that might be enough. But the surest way to find out would be to physically disconnect the HDD also, besides setting the machine to boot from the DVD drive. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 11, 2011 Author Share Posted September 11, 2011 Thanks guys. I just disabled the HDD in the BIOS and my XP/Office disk booted up just fine. So, is it something that my BIOS does not fully support this HDD? Is there anything I can do other than disable the HDD when needing to boot from the CD/DVD reader?Thanks again.Mobes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dencorso Posted September 11, 2011 Share Posted September 11, 2011 I'm glad to hear it worked! I don't believe there's any real lack of support from your BIOS for your new HDD.I think more likely it's one of those things so called "by design", since I've seein it happen on some HP laptops in the past.Now that we know that your DVD drive is OK and able to boot, the next step would be to try to keep the HDD enable in the main (first) BIOS screen, but to remove it completely from the BIOS BOOT screen (which uses to be the last one) only. If that works, you'll have a way to boot the CD while having the machine still recognize the HDD. If that turns out not to be possible, the next idea is to find out the machine's alternate boot Key (usually Esc, F11 or F12), to change the default boot device on the fly. This key should be pressed repetitively from the point the screen first lights up on reboot, and then it'll give you a boot device selection screen, from where you can select the DVD when needed. If even that proves not to work, then we can resort to 3rd party boot managers, like PloP... But let's try one thing at a time, right? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 11, 2011 Author Share Posted September 11, 2011 Thanks Dencorso-I'm not exactly sure what you mean by keeping the HDD enabled in the first BIOS screen but removing it from the BIOS boot?? What I did do sounds like your next suggestion; I entered into BIOS at startup by hitting ESC and went to the Advanced Tab into Boot Order. I then used the option to disable the HDD, saved settings and the CD/DVD disk booted. A few months ago when I was working on an install from USB, I had the chance to use PloP and it worked great! I successfully installed XP Pro and Office from my USB. Sounds like your second solution if I can figure out how to do it would be the best solution.Mobes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ponch Posted September 11, 2011 Share Posted September 11, 2011 Have you checked if the jumper on your new drive are set as it was on the old one ? (Master/Slave/CableSelect/Single) ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 11, 2011 Author Share Posted September 11, 2011 Hey Ponch,How can I check that on my laptop? Also, I will not be able to get right back to you as I will be out for a while. Thanks for everyone's help!Mobes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ponch Posted September 12, 2011 Share Posted September 12, 2011 Sorry I missed the fact it was a laptop. On a laptop it is very rare that any device is set differently than master (you usually have 1 HDD as master on channel1 and 1 optical drive as master on channel2).Does it take longer to start Windows when the DVD is set to boot first ? (in other words, does it try to boot DVD but decide it's unbootable and switches to next device?) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mobes Posted September 12, 2011 Author Share Posted September 12, 2011 When I attempt to boot with a bootable CD/DVD in the tray, I can hear the CD/DVD attempting to start (I assume being recognized). It then goes to a black screen with a blinking cursor for just a couple of seconds and then begins to boot Windows from the HDD. So, it seems as if it tries to boot the CD/DVD... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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