HELP with ntldr warning !!!!
#1
Posted 04 October 2006 - 07:55 PM
#2
Posted 04 October 2006 - 08:02 PM
You don't need to use the software for your hard drives. Windows 2000 setup can wipe your hard drives perfectly fine.
It sounds to me like you never installed Windows 2000 after you wiped the disks so the computer is just following the boot order and trying to boot off of the network.
Finally, why are you upgrading from Windows ME to Windows 2000 in the year 2006? You are going from a POS garbage OS that should have never been released to an OS that is pretty soon to have support dropped from it by Microsoft. If you were somehow able to put up with Windows ME for all this time then you should just go ahead and put up with Windows XP. Windows XP has all of the annoyingness of Windows ME but at least it's stable and it is actually for home use, whereas Windows 2000 was never intended for home I use.
Well I guess the reason that your upgrading to 2000 is because you didn't actually pay for it and you want a better operating system for your computer. I hate to say it but if you cannot troubleshoot the problem that you are experienceing ATM then you should probably have left well enough alone and just bought a new computer.
#3
Posted 05 October 2006 - 12:34 AM
#4
Posted 05 October 2006 - 01:00 AM
If you don't see this prompt then it's one of 2 things:
1. You cannot boot from your CD because it doesn't have that ability or was copied incorrectly.
2. Your BIOS does not have the option to boot from CD before booting from your hard drive or the network.
The problem is not disabling the network boot (although you can do this). The problem is you need to boot from the CD if the CD has that capability.
#5
Posted 05 October 2006 - 03:32 AM
Man, I can't remember the last time I booted off a floppy, I don't even have a floppy in my current system.
AMD Athlon64 3700+ @2.64ghz 240/11 (stock air, lapped) 1.475V
DFI LanParty Ultra-D PCI-E (Modded to SLI)
2X eVGA 7600GT CO @645/850 (Volt Modded)
OCZ Platinum EL 2X512 2-3-3-6 1T Dual Channel @220mhz
WD Caviar SE 80G 7200rpm 8MB
Sony CD burner
#6
Posted 05 October 2006 - 03:39 AM
#7
Posted 05 October 2006 - 10:00 PM
#8
Posted 05 October 2006 - 10:33 PM
When you say that you got the same message, what message are you referring to? Is it the message that you said in the title of your thread, the ntldr warning? If so, you are not booting off a valid boot disk, or off the Windows 2000 cd, or this is not a valid Windows 2000 boot cd. Apparently the boot sector is still resident on the hard drive and trying to find the Windows boot information files. You are not booting from the CD, but from the hard drive, which has no good copy of Windows on it. You may have erased the partition on the hard drive, but not the MBR.
When you made the Winboot floppy, did you invoke the exe file to make the floppy, or simply place the exe file directly on a floppy? If the latter, you are not booting from the floppy, rather from the hard drive, which still has the MBR resident on it. The Winboot utility must be invoked from Windows, which then prompts you to put in a floppy and goes on tomake a bootable floppy disk.
If this is a ECS L7vmm2 motherboard that you have, the boot order in the bios should be the cd as the first boot device, then the hard drive, if you are trying to boot from the Windows 2000 boot cd.
If booting off a valid Win 98 boot disk made from the Winboot utility, then the first order boot device in the bios should be the floppy drive. This should bring you to a command prompt. You then need to change to the drive designation for the cd drive and execute the setup command that Relic spoke about.
Let me know if I am off base on this, but it sounds like one of these problems is the issue.
#9
Posted 06 October 2006 - 07:54 PM
#10
Posted 06 October 2006 - 08:07 PM
You don't need to use the software for your hard drives. Windows 2000 setup can wipe your hard drives perfectly fine.
true you can use just win2000 disk however using the hdd makers utility has some advantages, for one u can check the drive for errors etc, and 2 it does a format in about 2 seconds as compared with several minutes for windows to do it, no big deal though either way, just a perference, just dont use win9X disk to format for ntfs.
#11
Posted 07 October 2006 - 12:49 AM
#12
Posted 07 October 2006 - 12:49 AM
#13
Posted 07 October 2006 - 04:08 PM

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