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Solve : NTLDR IS MISSING AND DOESN'T BOOT FROM THE CD?

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Maybe this will help: Unable To Boot To A CD/FDD Drive Using the USB MultiBay Cradlethank u man i think it will help me i will try it tonight and give u an answerYou're welcome
Keep us posted.Quote from: NEO on September 13, 2008, 11:24:13 AM

how many times i have to say it man it doesn't boot from the CD of windows and the running system is windows XP Sp2

And DROP the bad attitude...this is a Help Forum.sorry i didn't want to do that but that notebook is making me crazySo you can not boot even a floppy? If not, you may have to reload the Hard drive by using the network. What make and model is it? If it has NETBIOS you can reload it from another computer using a cross-over cable. Quote from: NEO on September 12, 2008, 09:23:24 AM
I NEED YOUR HELP MY NOTEBOOK COMPAQ NC6000 DOESN'T BOOT IT SHOWS NTLDR MISSING

Either the ntldr file (usually on the root of C:\) is actually missing or it's corrupt.

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I MADE A BOOTABLE CD WITH NTLDR

What type of bootable CD?

a) A CD with just NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI on the boot sector of a CD?
b) A CD with MS-DOS files on it along with NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI?
c) A CD with DR-DOS files on it along with NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI?
d) A Windows 98 disc?
E) An Ultimate Boot CD?
f) A BartPE CD?
g) A WinPE 2.0/2.1 CD?
h) A Linux Live CD?

There are many kinds of bootable CDs, so you need to be more specific. BTW, choices b) and c) above won't boot unless those files are written to the boot sector of the disc and not the data sectors of the disc itself.

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BUT IT DOESN'T START UP IT SHOWS ME THAT THAT HAL.DLL IS MISSING A MADE ANOTHER BOOTABLE CD WITH NTLDR AND HAL.DLL


See above.

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BUT IT SIT DOESN'T START WINDOWS BUT IT STARTS ANOTHER PROGRAM CALDERA DR-DOS

That right there tells me that your laptop can boot to a CD. Otherwise, Caldera DR-DOS wouldn't have executed (which was on the CD you created at the time).

In other words, you did c) above, writing them to the boot sector.

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AND SHOWS THIS MESSAGE:THE SYSTEM MEMORY MANAGER (EMM386.EXE) HAS DETECTED AN ERROR CAUSED BY A FAULT IN ONE OF THE DEVICE DRIVERS OR PROGRAMS LOADED IN THE SYSTEM. AND I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO BECAUSE IT DOESN'T HAVE THE OPTION TO BOOT FROM THE CD EVEN IN BIOS CAN U HELP ME PLEASE?

You made the DR-DOS disc correctly--it's just that part of DR-DOS isn't compatible with your laptop.

I would suggest choice a) above if you can do it correctly.

Choice a) Instructions:

1a) If you have a physical floppy drive, copy NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI to the floppy.
2a) Use Nero or Roxio to create a bootable CD using the floppy.
or
1b) If you don't have a floppy, then GOOGLE for a program called "Virtual Floppy Drive" or "VFD." Create the VFD, then copy the files to it.
2b) Use the resulting floppy image in Roxio or Nero to create your bootable CD.

Otherwise, if that's too much of a hassle, go with choice g) and PUT NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI on a flash drive.

Choice g) instructions:

1) Create your PE disc.

The easiest way I've found to create a PE disc is to follow these instructions:

http://www.msfn.org/board/How-to-make-a-basic-WinPE-20-CD-t83722.html&hl=2Mount.bat

2) Once you create the PE disc, try to boot from it (don't worry about the BIOS--you were able to boot from a CD before, so you should be able to boot from this one). Just make sure your computer has at least 384 MB of RAM or else PE will crap on you.

3) While it's booting, plug in the flash drive with NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM, and BOOT.INI on it.

4) When PE is up and running, you'll see a command prompt. The drives will probably be assigned as follows:

C: The drive with Windows XP on it giving you **** about NTLDR.
D: Your CD-ROM drive.
E: Your flash drive with the three files on it.
X: Windows PE's RAM drive.
(although D and E may actually be switched above).

5) Type in the following commands, pressing Enter after each one:
C:
ren ntldr ntldr.old
ren ntdetect.com ntdetect.com.old
ren boot.ini boot.ini.old
E:
copy ntldr c:
copy ntdetect.com c:
copy boot.ini c:
notepad

6) In notepad, click File -> Open.

7) Go to the C drive and find boot.ini. Open it.

Make sure your boot.ini is referencing the correct partition. It should look something like this:

[boot loader]
timeout=30
default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS
[operating systems]
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Professional" /fastdetect

If not, change it. The last line may have /noexecute=optin or something like that. That's okay.

Save your changes and close Notepad.

9) Close the command prompt. This will shut down PE and restart your computer. Remove the PE disc and the flash drive.



Wow, that's a nice homework, Mr. killerb255 Quote from: Broni on September 14, 2008, 05:59:06 PM
Wow, that's a nice homework, Mr. killerb255

Thanks!

The company I work for usually does unattended installs of Windows XP and Vista using boot discs. We used to use the Ultimate Boot CD until we found out not only that Vista doesn't like DOS-based unattended installs, but XP with certain long file names slipstreamed into the source (usually after IE7 or Window Media Player 11 is slipstreamed) doesn't like it either. From there, we just used Windows PE for that purpose.

PE's also good for other things:
- replacement for XP recovery console (good for people with factory-built systems that don't come with a real OS disc).
- removing virus or malware files without having to be in the main OS (if only Hijack This can read a remote registry...).
- moving/copying/deleting system files that are normally locked while in Windows
- using Ghost or Acronis to clone a hard drive/push a clone image to a hard drive or partition.

Windows PE 2.1 is basically a stripped down Windows Vista live CD without Explorer (it only has a command prompt)...and it's free from Microsoft (what a concept!). Since PE can read flash drives without much hassle, I figured that was the next best route for NEO to take.It looks like this board can surely use you with helping others
Enjoy your stay...
How did you find out about CH, anyway?I found out about this place while Googling for a problem I was having with a customer's speakers. You're ours, now You said you have a NOTEBOOK COMPAQ NC6000
Did you steal this notebook? If it was yours, you would know how it works. And you could contact HP and they would help you.
This notebook does not need to boot from a CD.
Do a search or "Compaq Support" and you will find other forums that deal just in Compaq notebook issues. While we're necromancing 3-week old topics...I am curious as to whether Neo was able to resolve his issue...i have the same problem as above person.. i tried the repair console,, did the fixboot command, did the fixmbr command,,, and it still says:

Press any key to boot from CD. . . .
NTLRD is missing
press Ctrl+Alt+Del to restart


its a DELL Desktop... and im about to run head first into a wall...
please help


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