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BSOD after attempting to increase size of C drive partitionthe size of my C drive partition on my desktop from 40gb to 80gb using Partition Magic. C is the only partition, the other 40gb was unallocated, the drive is an 80gb Maxtor 7200 IDE (not sure of the correct description but it's not a SATA drive). The boot went past the Windows spalsh screen but after that to BSOD. Not connected to the Internet, antivirus was disabled, GoBack was turned off, and the Partition Magic screen progress messages during the operation seemed normal. Here is the BSOD message, which reappeared after rebooting as well: <STOP (lots of numbers) Inacessible boot device. If this is the first time you've seen this error screen, restart your computer.If this screen appears again, folloew these steps. Check for viruses on your computer. Remove any newly installed hard drives or hard drive controllers. Check your hard drive to make sure it is properly configured and terminated. Run CHKDSK /F to check for hard drive corruption and then restart your computer. Refer to your Getting Started manual for more information on troubleshooting STOP errors.> FWIW, I'd just done a thorough AV scan. This may be more than I can fix myself, but the place to find that out is here. Roger Fink wrote:
> I think I really may have stepped in it here. Tonight I tried to increase Those "(lots of numbers)" are the most important part of the error > the size of my C drive partition on my desktop from 40gb to 80gb using > Partition Magic. C is the only partition, the other 40gb was unallocated, > the drive is an 80gb Maxtor 7200 IDE (not sure of the correct description > but it's not a SATA drive). The boot went past the Windows spalsh screen but > after that to BSOD. Not connected to the Internet, antivirus was disabled, > GoBack was turned off, and the Partition Magic screen progress messages > during the operation seemed normal. Here is the BSOD message, which > reappeared after rebooting as well: > > <STOP (lots of numbers) message! I'm guessing that it's an 0x7b error but it would be better if we had the numbers. Had you uninstalled GoBack before doing the partition resizing? Certainly you had made a proper backup or image of the drive before you attempted to resize the partition? Can the Partition Magic utility undo the partitioning job? You can try booting to the Recovery Console and running the Chkdsk /r and Fixboot commands but to tell you the truth a botched up partition job on a disk with a GoBack MBR is bad news! John John John - MVP wrote:
Show quoteHide quote > Roger Fink wrote: Thanks John, sorry it took so long to reply to this – they had me under>> I think I really may have stepped in it here. Tonight I tried to >> increase the size of my C drive partition on my desktop from 40gb to >> 80gb using Partition Magic. C is the only partition, the other 40gb >> was unallocated, the drive is an 80gb Maxtor 7200 IDE (not sure of >> the correct description but it's not a SATA drive). The boot went >> past the Windows spalsh screen but after that to BSOD. Not connected >> to the Internet, antivirus was disabled, GoBack was turned off, and >> the Partition Magic screen progress messages during the operation >> seemed normal. Here is the BSOD message, which reappeared after >> rebooting as well: >> >> <STOP (lots of numbers) > > Those "(lots of numbers)" are the most important part of the error > message! I'm guessing that it's an 0x7b error but it would be better > if we had the numbers. > > Had you uninstalled GoBack before doing the partition resizing? > Certainly you had made a proper backup or image of the drive before > you attempted to resize the partition? Can the Partition Magic > utility undo the partitioning job? > > You can try booting to the Recovery Console and running the Chkdsk /r > and Fixboot commands but to tell you the truth a botched up partition > job on a disk with a GoBack MBR is bad news! > > John sedation. Here are the error numbers: <STOP: 0X0000007B (0XF681B84C, 0XC000000E, 0X00000000, 0X0000000). Inaccessible boot device...> I’m afraid I have to walk under the picture of Chairman Mao (Gates?) on this one. I’ve done this procedure with no problem 4 or 5 times, which means I uninstalled GoBack 4 or 5 times (rather than merely disable it). Some people get wiser as they get older, but not everyone. I did do a back up all my data including email to an external drive a few days earlier, so I didn’t really lose anything to speak of. And I keep a laptop around with the same programs installed and configured as in the desktop. The laptop is the performance equal of (or better than) the desktop in every way except probably longevity, and it doesn’t sound like a power plant either. So with my old keyboard and monitor hooked up to it I’d say I got off fairly lucky, but I'd still rather fall victim to events beyond my control rather than ones I could control but didn't. I’d consider trying to have it fixed rather than me wiping the drive if there is a decent chance to salvage what’s there, but out of commission at the moment. So any opinions on that would be appreciated. Totally OT, but the dates in the laptop (for instance in Explorer and Tbird) are configured backwards from what I’m used to and prefer. The Help file shows how to change this so I went into Regional Options to change it but the date configuration was shown exactly backwards (06/28/2009) from what was appearing on the screen (28/06/2009). When I changed the configuration to 28/06/2009 everything on the machine then read 06/28/2009, so problem solved. I experienced this some years ago. It seems as NT systems don't like
partition size changes. I adjusted the size of the partition, and it would boot once, then the second boot would be the bsod. Adjusting the partition slightly (with another machine) it would boot once more. I ended up backing up and did a in place reinstall was the only way I could get it to not bsod. "JM" <jason.mangiaf***@verizon.net> wrote in message I have gone through numerous partition size changes, mostly without any news:%23oNvGWw6JHA.1420@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >I experienced this some years ago. It seems as NT systems don't like > partition size changes. I adjusted the size of the partition, and it > would > boot once, then the second boot would be the bsod. Adjusting the > partition > slightly (with another machine) it would boot once more. I ended up > backing > up and did a in place reinstall was the only way I could get it to not > bsod. problems. In the case reported by the OP, Partition Magic may have damaged something. This is why I usually create an image before I change the partition size. It takes some time but it's the safe way to go.
Operate two mice and keyboards simultaneously?
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