Drive no longer detected by Windows

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8 Jun 2004
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My old system has two hard drives - one running Win98 and 2000 in dual-boot, the other running XP. I had specified the boot order so that the second disk booted first and XP always loaded. Until recently, when I suddenly found myself in Windows 2000 for no apparent reason.

Ever since, I can't get Windows to recognise my main (XP) drive - it shows up fine in the BIOS but no matter what I do, what boot order I specify, the other disk kicks in and Win2K loads. Then I go into Disk Management and the XP disk doesn't even show up.

When Win2K starts to load, there's a very brief flash of an error message at the top of the screen before the Windows splash screen appears - it seems to say something about an I/O error, but it's gone too quickly for me to read it.

I think my disk has died somehow, but am puzzled as to why the BIOS still thinks it's fine, even after re-running the Autodetect. Anyone got any ideas? Is my disk a dead loss? I had a lot of data on it, and only the absolutely vital stuff was backed up - everything else is just a (fairly major) pain not to have. (Ironically enough, the whole point of me booting it up that time was to copy all the data to another disk - typical!)
 
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It may not be a dead HDD, it could be that there's something up with the XP installation on it and the error your seeing is related to that. The best bet will be to pull the W2K drive and let the system boot to the error, that way you can see if there's a way of recovering the XP install before you need to do anything more drastic.
 
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