EzBCD keep me out both OS's

pbtaz

New Member
Hello all ... Hope someone can help ... I believe that I need tom remove EzBCD but cannot get to my disks now ... I have Xp and Vista ultimate dual booting with EzBCD but SP1 caused problem with Vista ...went back to XP open ExBCD tried to figure out what to do .. the problem now I cannot get to either system how do I get it to boot to XP .. I think Boot Manager has the Disk Letter assignments all wrong... cannot get to I need to remove Boot Manager So I can boot from C: Drive Got install disk for both but XP Repair option not recognize usb floppy drive to use ASR .... EzBCD will not let me into either drive OS system XP has NTDLR missing or something but How do I talk to disk if ExBCD wont let me in?????? HElp!!!!! Thank you
 
Lol...looks like you're in a bit of a problem there. :smile:
First of all, EasyBCD is not the bootloader, its not the bootmanager, and it didn't mess up your boot (at least not by itself). Anything it does, is because you (the user) told it to. EasyBCD is just a normal program who's execution is over once you close it. It has no affect on the system whatsover at boot time. It is only what you have done with EasyBCD that messed up the boot.

The bootloader was written by Microsoft, and belongs to Windows as a small (but very essential) part of the system. The BCD (boot configuration data store) file is what EasyBCD operates on, and is what is responsible for storing the boot options (i.e. the boot entries in your boot menu at startup of PC).

Ok...now onto your problem.

First of all, we need to determine precisely what you have done to your system to render it unbootable. From the sounds of it, you can't get into either Vista or XP. Attempting to boot into XP you say gives you an NTLDR missing message. Ok...I've heard that one before (many times). The problem is, its unclear whether you used EasyBCD | Manage Bootloader | Uninstall the Vista bootloader | Write MBR to digress the MBR/PBR to XP versions (which are incompatible with Vista), or your problem is of another variety (such as just a missing NTLDR). The difference is very important, because with one you will need to repair your Vista MBR, while the other one would mean you're just missing the NTLDR.

At any rate, a simple answer "yes" or "no" to the following question will produce the information necessary in order to determine one way or the other: Do you see a boot menu at startup when you turn on your computer, then you select XP in the menu, and that's when you get the error?

If not, it means you did indeed replace the Vista MBR with the XP one, meaning you'll need to run Startup Repair from the Vista dvd or our recovery disk to get it back. Once you can get into Vista again, it will then only be a matter of using EasyBCD 2.0 Beta to delete and re-add the XP entry, letting it auto-configure, without changing where its pointed, and you'll have your dual-boot back.
 
Back
Top