See below.
"Moxieman" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news

93820E6-08F1-491C-A832-(E-Mail Removed)...
>I bought a used Dell Inspiron 1000 laptop running XP home edition, SP3. I
>do
> NOT have either installation CD or rescue CD for it. The hard drive has 3
> partitions, a 16-meg (I assume it is boot), a C: drive, and a G: drive,
> which
> has the Dell rescue files. The C: drive is marked Healthy (system).
>
> The hard drive is dying, so I bought a new hard drive and used Norton
> Ghost
> 2003 to clone it onto a new one. I could not assign the equivalent
> partition
> on the new hard disc the C: letter because the old, cloned partition's C:
> drive had that letter.
*** Drive letter assignments as seen during the cloning process are
*** irrelevant. It's the assignment on the final Windows installation
*** that counts.
> Also, I could make that equivalent partition "Healthy"
> but not "system."
*** You don't make it "healthty" or "system" but you must mark
*** it "active" if you want to boot from it.
>I understand that I cannot have two partitions with the
> same letter, and cannot have two partitions marked "system" at
> the same time.
>
> I swapped out the drives. When I tried to boot, of course, I got a message
> of "error loading operating system." I can boot into Dell Diagnostics and
> the
> hardware checks out fine, but Dell Diagnostics doesn't allow me to change
> partition letters or make a partition a "system" partition.
*** See above about the "system partition".
> 1. How do I assign the new partition the C: partition letter without a
> rescue or install CD?
*** There may be no need to change anything.
> 2. How do I mark the new partition as "system" and not just "healthy?"
*** You mark it active. Here is one way to do it:
*** - Boot the machine with a Win98 boot diskette from
***
www.bootdisk.com.
*** - Run fdisk.exe.
*** - Mark the first partition as "active".
> I have the old hard drive and can always put it in and run disk
> management,
> but that still leaves me with the problems of assigning the drive letter
> and
> making it "system."
*** If you can connect both disks at the same time then you can
*** mark the first partition on the new disk as "active" in the Disk
*** Manager.
> Also, the new hard drive is 250 gigabytes, but the BIOS shows it as 137
> gigabytes. Is that related to the problem?
*** No, it isn't, but I'm not sure whether Windows XP will be subject
*** to the same limitation.
> Thanks,
>
> Moxieman