michael56555 and t-4-2,
I have been following this closely, as I have had the same situation as
michael56555, and I have also tried every single method that he has tried
right up until this point. Here is where we now diverge - michael56555 is at
least now getting:
Checking file system on C:
Type of the file system is NTFS
Cannot open volume for direct access
I'm still getting nothing more than what appears to be a "normal boot". I
do sometimes hear 3 very faint "boop - boop - boop" sounds, like it has
encountered something that it wants to tell me about - but that's just after
I log in, not while it's booting up.
I have a Dell XPS-M1530 laptop with Vista Home Premium, and as best I can
tell it came with SP1 installed.
I'll keep scouring through this stuff until I find a solution. I am unable
to run Diskeeper 2008 Premium Pro on this partition - and I only bought that
expensive program to run on this laptop.
Thanks
Gregg
--
Gregg Mack
"michael56555" wrote:
> I have run chkdsk /f from the cmd prompt as you describe with the same results.
>
> However, I went back to the C: properties and clicked on Fix errors and the
> second box to fix disk errors. This time when I reboot, I get this:
> Checking file system on C:
> Type of the file system is NTFS
> Cannot open volume for direct access
>
> I ran an elevated command prompt and ran chkdsk /x/r to force dismount the
> drive and get the same result with the can't access comment.
>
> I enabled the boot log but do not see anywhere that it is loading check
> disk. Perhaps it doesn't start recording until the drive is mounted. Any
> ideas?
> Mike
>
> "t-4-2" wrote:
>
> >
> > t-4-2;705825 Wrote:
> > > > michael56555;705817 Wrote:
> > > > Ok, when checking the disk for errors with check disk, I usually go to
> > > > My
> > > > Computer left click on C: drive (I am left handed and have buttons
> > > > switched...before you ask) go to the tools tab, click on "This option
> > > > will
> > > > check the volume for errors" click the check now button, click th
> > > > eAutomatically fix file system errors. Then click start where it tells
> > > > me it
> > > > can't and would I like to schedule it at restart. I click yes and
> > > > restart
> > > > the computer.
> > > >
> > > > When the computer restarts, it starts normally and does not run check
> > > > disk.
> > > >
> > > > If I run it from the elevated prompt, I type in chkdsk /f in the search
> > > > area
> > > > of the start button. I left click on the file presented at the top of
> > > > the
> > > > box and select "run as administrator. (this part is a new problem) it
> > > > starts in read only mode and tells me that the "F" switch was not
> > > > selected.
> > > >
> > > > If i execute it from the Run box, I type in chkdsk /f and it asks me if
> > > > i
> > > > want to schedule it at the next computer start. I type in "y" and then
> > > > restart the computer. Check disk does not run and it boots normally.
> > > >
> > > > If I try these functions in safe mode, the same thing happens.
> > > >
> > > > I have run chkdsk (or scandsk) since Dos 3.1.... I am computer literate
> > > > enough to do all the normal things.
> > > >
> > > > Running it in read-only mode now tells me I have unindexed files so I
> > > > need
> > > > to get this issue straightened out .
> > > >
> > > > Scannow cfe finds no problems. Replacing the autochk file did not help.
> > > > Went through x64.com tutorial..that didn't help. Nothing I have found
> > > > online
> > > > has produced a solution.
> > > >
> > > > I created a bootable CD when I bought the computer, but can't figure
> > > > out how
> > > > to get a D: prompt because it starts the Lenovo recovery and diagnostic
> > > > functions. Running them doesn't find anything wrong.
> > > >
> > > > I have not tried pulling a chkdsk.exe off of my old XP machine...maybe
> > > > that
> > > > will work.
> > > > Thanks,
> > > > Mike
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Any help would be appreciated.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > "t-4-2" wrote:
> > > > > >
> > > Hello michael,
> > > Bear with me. Try it my way :-
> > > Start menu > search box, type cmd > right click (I'm right handed)
> > > cmd at top > click Run as Admin > command prompt appears ( see
> > > screenshot below) > now you can type chkdsk /f at the prompt, press
> > > Enter key> type y > reboot. Does it work for you this time ?
> > > Please click the link to see screenshot.
> > > 'ImageGrotto: Free Image and Screenshot Hosting'
> > > (http://imagegrotto.com/view-command_prompt10666.JPG)
> > Here is a better screenshot for illustration.
> >
> > 'ImageGrotto: Free Image and Screenshot Hosting'
> > (http://imagegrotto.com/view-cmd310678.JPG)
> >
> >
> > --
> > t-4-2
> >