stop 0×00000024 ntfs.sys
so it seems that my ntfs.sys on my boot disk is corrupted.
i’m running winxp.
searching google, everything seems to indicate that i need to figure out a way to boot from another disk, remove the ntfs.sys and run chkdsk on the corrupted disk.
however, what they fail to mention is how to avoid the bsod that immediately comes up when i load up the corrupted disk.
i’ve tried plugging this corrupt disk into a fat32 os = bsod in safe mode
i’ve tried running recovery console from orginal winxp cd = bsod
i’ve tried using bartpe = bsod
so i’m not able to remove the corrupted ntfs.sys from the corrupted disk. the only thing that i can think of which i haven’t tried is using linux and removing the ntfs.sys from linux.
but i’ve got a slow internet connection and it’ll take me a while to download a linux bootcd.
meanwhile, does anyone have any other suggestions that i can try?
you are on the right track, I’ve seen this with a corrupt file systsem, not just driver.. and a linux boot cd was the only way I could access it to recover the files. Even a windows boot cd would bsod on ntfs
Are you sure you’re actually booting up the other OS? The other OS shouldn’t even look at the broken disk. Using an external enclosure would allow you to boot up the other OS before attaching the drive.
yeah, pretty much everything bsod’s with this disk hooked up.
right now, i can’t even format the disk or anything.
so hopefully this linux thing will work.
yeah, i tried using an external enclosure.
it bsod’s the second i plug in the corrupt disk.
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so it seems that my ntfs.sys on my boot disk is corrupted.
i’m running winxp. searching google, everything seems to indicate that i need to figure out a way to boot from another disk, remove the ntfs.sys and run chkdsk on the corrupted disk. however, what they fail to mention is how to avoid the bsod that immediately comes up when i load up the corrupted disk. i’ve tried plugging this corrupt disk into a fat32 os = bsod in safe mode so i’m not able to remove the corrupted ntfs.sys from the corrupted disk. the only thing that i can think of which i haven’t tried is using linux and removing the ntfs.sys from linux. but i’ve got a slow internet connection and it’ll take me a while to download a linux bootcd. meanwhile, does anyone have any other suggestions that i can try? |
stupid question, but when you’re switching OSes and whatnot, are you making the old boot drive a slave drive? (either change the cable position under cable select, or changing the jumper to slave)
If it’s still the primary master, it doesn’t matter what other drive you put in. Unless you got a bootloader, it will boot your problem drive.
Just the fact that BartPE BSODs on it means its the filesystem
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