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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Remove XP from dual-boot I upgraded an existing XP MCE install to Vista Ultimate 64-bit. Vista installed to a partition on another hard drive - a 74G Raptor. System is now dual-boot between Vista and XP. Both drives are SATA. I am happy with Vista, and want to remove XP from Disk 0 which (under Vista) is the D drive. However, that partition in Disk Manager is marked as (System, Active, Primary Partition) and cannot be formatted or deleted. The Vista partition on disk 1 is marked (Boot, Page File, Crash Dump, Primary Partition), but not Active. I'm wary of marking it as active....as I'm not sure what I'm doing there. I've tried to boot the computer with the XP drive disconnected, but it won't boot. I've tried to do a repair from the Vista disk with the XP drive disconnected, but it can't find ANY windows installs. I've tried loading SATA drivers but that doesn't help - I don't think I need them anyway - I can SEE the Vista drive when I browse for drivers.... Is there any way other than a complete new install without the XP drive connected and a format of the Vista drive? Ned |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Remove XP from dual-boot Okay - that was WAY too hard. There must be must be an easier way, but this is how I did it. Actual steps are short - finding them took a long time! 1. Mark the Vista partition as active in Disk Manager. 2. Copy Boot.ini, bootmgr, and boot subdirectory from XP drive to Vista drive. Two files in the boot subdirectory will not copy because they are in use - that's okay. 3.Turn off computer and disconnect the XP drive. This may not be necessary if your bios allows the next step. 4. Move the Vista disk to the first disk position in the 'hard disk boot order' in bios. 5. Boot to the Vista DVD (64-bit in my case) 6. Choose repair windows and let it fix, repair, install ,whatever, the boot sector on the vista disk. Voila! Now does not ask which OS, just boots right to Vista. It amazes me that there is not a standard built-in way to does this - When upgrading from XP x86 to Vista 64bit, installing to another drive seems like a natural way to do it. Ned "Ned Buckmaster" <Ned@Buckmaster.com> wrote in message news:%23HdG8MrUHHA.496@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >I upgraded an existing XP MCE install to Vista Ultimate 64-bit. Vista >installed to a partition on another hard drive - a 74G Raptor. System is >now dual-boot between Vista and XP. Both drives are SATA. > > I am happy with Vista, and want to remove XP from Disk 0 which (under > Vista) is the D drive. However, that partition in Disk Manager is marked > as (System, Active, Primary Partition) and cannot be formatted or deleted. > The Vista partition on disk 1 is marked (Boot, Page File, Crash Dump, > Primary Partition), but not Active. I'm wary of marking it as active....as > I'm not sure what I'm doing there. > > I've tried to boot the computer with the XP drive disconnected, but it > won't boot. I've tried to do a repair from the Vista disk with the XP > drive disconnected, but it can't find ANY windows installs. I've tried > loading SATA drivers but that doesn't help - I don't think I need them > anyway - I can SEE the Vista drive when I browse for drivers.... > > Is there any way other than a complete new install without the XP drive > connected and a format of the Vista drive? > > Ned |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Remove XP from dual-boot You might try installing VISTABOOTPro the free utility you can download from http://www.vistabootpro.org/ It handles the bits you need to manually edit to alter dual boot settings. Try installing that in the VISTA partition, running it and see if you get a tool to uninstall the XP and set the VISTA partition up as if it were alone. Then you would be able to format the XP partition without destroying the boot files that VISTA will have put on the XP partition. I'm not sure you can do this but doing the converse -- remove VISTA and leave XP on its own is certainly set up in VISTABOOTPro. If it doesn't work when installed in the VISTA partition try doing it installed in the XP partition which may be where it wants to be. Of coourse someone here may know exactly how to do it <g> |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: Remove XP from dual-boot Ned, if it's anything like my experience as soon as you re-enable the second hard drive vista refuses to boot again. Doing a startup repair simply puts the boot files on the second hard drive rather than the first. In the end i simply reformatted both drives re-installed XP, created another partition and then installed Vista. The boot files on the second hard drive, by the way, was due to the BIOS, apparently. As no new BIOS updates were available fro my machine (which is 2 years old) the above scenario was the only solution. I originally dual booted and all i wanted to do was wipe the drive and install Vista on drive 0. Install went fine, rebooted machine and got a 'cannot find operating system' message. Took out the second hard drive and did a startup repair, Vista worked perfect. Installed the second hard drive again and rebooted 'operating system not found' message again. Did a startup repair and vista created a 10GB partition on the second hard drive and installed the boot files there. It was actually a nightmare to finally get things working how i wanted them to - unfortunately that meant re-installing xp and vista on a dual boot system again. The alternative, of course, would have been to buy a larger hard drive (my machine runs 2 x 80GB drives). -- John Barnett MVP Associate Expert Windows - Shell/User Web: http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org Web: http://vistasupport.mvps.org The information in this mail/post is supplied "as is". No warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, is made in relation to the accuracy, reliability or content of this mail/post. The Author shall not be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the use of, or inability to use, information or opinions expressed in this mail/post.. "Ned Buckmaster" <Ned@Buckmaster.com> wrote in message news:eRdwzt2UHHA.5108@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... > Okay - that was WAY too hard. There must be must be an easier way, but > this is how I did it. Actual steps are short - finding them took a long > time! > > 1. Mark the Vista partition as active in Disk Manager. > > 2. Copy Boot.ini, bootmgr, and boot subdirectory from XP drive to Vista > drive. Two files in the boot subdirectory will not copy because they are > in use - that's okay. > > 3.Turn off computer and disconnect the XP drive. This may not be necessary > if your bios allows the next step. > > 4. Move the Vista disk to the first disk position in the 'hard disk boot > order' in bios. > > 5. Boot to the Vista DVD (64-bit in my case) > > 6. Choose repair windows and let it fix, repair, install ,whatever, the > boot sector on the vista disk. > > Voila! Now does not ask which OS, just boots right to Vista. > > It amazes me that there is not a standard built-in way to does this - When > upgrading from XP x86 to Vista 64bit, installing to another drive seems > like a natural way to do it. > > Ned > > "Ned Buckmaster" <Ned@Buckmaster.com> wrote in message > news:%23HdG8MrUHHA.496@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>I upgraded an existing XP MCE install to Vista Ultimate 64-bit. Vista >>installed to a partition on another hard drive - a 74G Raptor. System is >>now dual-boot between Vista and XP. Both drives are SATA. >> >> I am happy with Vista, and want to remove XP from Disk 0 which (under >> Vista) is the D drive. However, that partition in Disk Manager is marked >> as (System, Active, Primary Partition) and cannot be formatted or >> deleted. The Vista partition on disk 1 is marked (Boot, Page File, Crash >> Dump, Primary Partition), but not Active. I'm wary of marking it as >> active....as I'm not sure what I'm doing there. >> >> I've tried to boot the computer with the XP drive disconnected, but it >> won't boot. I've tried to do a repair from the Vista disk with the XP >> drive disconnected, but it can't find ANY windows installs. I've tried >> loading SATA drivers but that doesn't help - I don't think I need them >> anyway - I can SEE the Vista drive when I browse for drivers.... >> >> Is there any way other than a complete new install without the XP drive >> connected and a format of the Vista drive? >> >> Ned > |
My System Specs![]() |
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