removing win98 from dual boot setup

M

murray

Fiesta

I currently have the following Dual Boot set-up:
1-Two hard drives
2- Drive #1(Drive C) has Windows 98 installed
3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has Windows 2000 installed
I would like to completely remove Windows 98 and make windows 2000 my only OS, bootable as Drive C on a single physical Hard Drive. I would then use the freed up drive for general storage.
What must I do in order to accomplish this?
 
P

philo

Fiesta

I currently have the following Dual Boot set-up:
1-Two hard drives
2- Drive #1(Drive C) has Windows 98 installed
3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has Windows 2000 installed
I would like to completely remove Windows 98 and make windows 2000 my only
OS, bootable as Drive C on a single physical Hard Drive. I would then use
the freed up drive for general storage.
What must I do in order to accomplish this?



You MUST leave your C: drive in place as that is where your boot files
reside...
plus removing it would change your win2k drive letter and your system would
not function.

All you really need to do is remove the win98 reference in boot.ini
and then delete anything you do not need on your C: drive that's in a folder


What MUST remain on the C: drive root would be

boot.ini
ntdetect.com
ntldr

plus your page file if it's already there...
though that can be moved *from within the contol panel* to your D: drive
if so desired
 
R

relic

Fiesta

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD><TITLE id=3DridTitle>Fiesta</TITLE>
<META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
charset=3Dwindows-1252"><BASE=20
href=3D"file://D:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft =
Shared\Stationery\">
<STYLE>BODY {
MARGIN-TOP: 25px; FONT-SIZE: 10pt; MARGIN-LEFT: 25px; COLOR: #000000; =
FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica
}
P.msoNormal {
MARGIN-TOP: 0px; FONT-SIZE: 10pt; MARGIN-LEFT: 0px; COLOR: #ffffcc; =
FONT-FAMILY: Helvetica, "Times New Roman"
}
LI.msoNormal {
MARGIN-TOP: 0px; FONT-SIZE: 10pt; MARGIN-LEFT: 0px; COLOR: #ffffcc; =
FONT-FAMILY: Helvetica, "Times New Roman"
}
</STYLE>

<META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1593" name=3DGENERATOR></HEAD>
<BODY id=3DridBody=20
background=3D"file:///D:/Program Files/Common Files/Microsoft =
Shared/Stationery/Blank Bkgrd.gif">
<CENTER><FONT face=3DArial></FONT>&nbsp;</CENTER>
<P></P>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#400040>I currently have the following =
Dual Boot=20
set-up:</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#400040>1-Two hard drives</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#400040>2- Drive #1(Drive C) &nbsp;has =
Windows 98=20
installed</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#400040>3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has =
Windows 2000=20
installed</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#400040>I would like to completely =
remove Windows 98=20
and make windows 2000 my only OS, bootable as Drive C on a single =
physical Hard=20
Drive. I would then use the freed up drive for&nbsp;general=20
storage.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#400040>What must I do&nbsp;in order to =
accomplish=20
this?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial =
color=3D#400040></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV></BODY></HTML>


http://support.microsoft.com/kb/289022
 
P

Pegasus \(MVP\)

FiestaTry this:
1. Copy the three hidden Win2000 boot files from C:\ to D:\
- c:\ntldr
- c:\ntdetect.com
- c:\boot.ini

2. Unhide and edit d:\boot.ini.
- Remove the Win98 reference.
- Modify the lines "multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(1)partition(1)\WINNT= . . ." to rdisk(0)

3. Disconnect the Win98 disk.

4. Make the Win2000 disk the primary master disk.

5. Boot the machine with a Win98 boot disk from www.bootdisk.com.

6. Run this command: fdisk /mbr

7. Run fdisk.exe and mark the Win2000 partition active.

8. Boot the machine normally.

Note that the Windows system drive letter will still be D:
even though this partition is the one and only partition on
the disk. You cannot change this.

It is possible that Windows will boot up but that it will
continuously cycle through the logon process. Post again
if this happens. Fixing this problem would be greatly
facilitated if you had another Win2000/XP machine with a
tried and proven network connection to the Win2000 PC.




I currently have the following Dual Boot set-up:
1-Two hard drives
2- Drive #1(Drive C) has Windows 98 installed
3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has Windows 2000 installed
I would like to completely remove Windows 98 and make windows 2000 my only OS, bootable as Drive C on a single physical Hard Drive. I would then use the freed up drive for general storage.
What must I do in order to accomplish this?
 
D

Dave Patrick

Also make sure that the partition is a primary not extended partition before
beginning.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect
 
P

Pegasus \(MVP\)

Dave Patrick said:
Also make sure that the partition is a primary not extended partition
before beginning.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

Good point - I overlooked this one.
 
G

GHalleck

murray said:
I currently have the following Dual Boot set-up:
1-Two hard drives
2- Drive #1(Drive C) has Windows 98 installed
3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has Windows 2000 installed
I would like to completely remove Windows 98 and make windows 2000 my
only OS, bootable as Drive C on a single physical Hard Drive. I would
then use the freed up drive for general storage.
What must I do in order to accomplish this?

There is no easy nor quick way of doing this. If the installation
disks and files for all of the applications are still available, then
do a new, clean install of Windows 2000 to Drive C. This frees up
Drive D for general storage.

The otherwise alternative is to follow Philo's suggestion. After
removing Windows 98 from Drive C, then it can be used for storage
(instead of D).

Another alternative would be to retain the dual-boot and use an
external, USB drive for storage. There might come that rare occasion
when one might have wished at keeping the dual-boot in existence.
 
R

Robert Baer

murray said:
I currently have the following Dual Boot set-up:
1-Two hard drives
2- Drive #1(Drive C) has Windows 98 installed
3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has Windows 2000 installed
I would like to completely remove Windows 98 and make windows 2000 my
only OS, bootable as Drive C on a single physical Hard Drive. I would
then use the freed up drive for general storage.
What must I do in order to accomplish this?
1) *BACKUP* the Win2K drive bymaking an exact copy to a blank HD, same
or larger size, making the copy the same size as the original.
2) Using that BACKUP HD, do a repair install of Win2K.
That should fix the problem of the Win2K initialization files are on
the Win98 HD.
No programs, passwords, etc get changed or lost.
Verify that the BACKUP HD works by itself and has all of what you
need from the original.
Use this new HD for a few months as a master / working HD, keeping
the "old" drives for mister Justin Case.
Get yet another HD, same size for BACKUP of that new working HD.
When you find no "oopsies", then the "old" Win2K drive can become a
spare BACKUP HD.
 
H

hmmmmmm

i haven't tried this myself but....

is it possible to swap the master / slave pins on each drive
around and to make the win2k drive "master" or "C" drive?

then maybe try doing a "ERD" (?) and "repair" the win2k drive's
bootsector settings etc. so it start's up normally on bootup?

that could make your win2k drive the new "C" startup drive
and keep all your existing win2k files intact........and then
you could leave your old win98 drive as slave/storage etc....

dunno if this will work but making a backup of everything first
before you fart around, would be a smart move.....

my 2 cents

regards

Harry
 
H

hmmmmmm

dunno if this will work but...........

couldn't you swap the master/slave pins around on the 2 disks
to make win2k the master and win98 the slave....

then maybe do an "ERD" (?) to repair the win2k setup (bootsector)
so that it boots normally.......

this could let you keep all your win2k stuff and let you keep the win98
disk as slave/storage and possibly backup disk in case the other
stuffs up.

making a backup of everything before you fart around, would also
be a smart move.....

my 2 cents

regards

Harry
 
G

Gazwad

Robert Baer <[email protected]>, the decrepit-bummer and flagrant
huckle who likes adulterous non-orthogenic sex with macaws, and whose
partner is a charity girl with a tight prick pit, wrote in
1) *BACKUP* the Win2K drive bymaking an exact copy to a blank HD, same or
larger size, making the copy the same size as the original.
2) Using that BACKUP HD, do a repair install of Win2K.
That should fix the problem of the Win2K initialization files are on the
Win98 HD.
No programs, passwords, etc get changed or lost.

Does you definition of "etcetera" discount windows updates?

--
For my own part, I have never had a thought which I could not set down
in words with even more distinctness than that with which I conceived
it. There is, however, a class of fancies of exquisite delicacy which
are not thoughts, and to which as yet I have found it absolutely
impossible to adapt to language. These fancies arise in the soul, alas
how rarely. Only at epochs of most intense tranquillity, when the
bodily and mental health are in perfection. And at those weird points
of time, where the confines of the waking world blend with the world of
dreams. And so I captured this fancy, where all that we see, or seem,
is but a dream within a dream.
 
G

Gazwad

hmmmmmm <[email protected]>, the ghastly-welfare-bum and impudent
backdoor man who likes indelicate yodel yanking with hyenas, and whose
partner is a woman of loose morals with a disagreeable squashed
hedgehog said:
i haven't tried this myself but....

is it possible to swap the master / slave pins on each drive
around and to make the win2k drive "master" or "C" drive?

then maybe try doing a "ERD" (?) and "repair" the win2k drive's
bootsector settings etc. so it start's up normally on bootup?

that could make your win2k drive the new "C" startup drive
and keep all your existing win2k files intact........and then
you could leave your old win98 drive as slave/storage etc....

dunno if this will work but making a backup of everything first
before you fart around, would be a smart move.....

my 2 cents

regards

Harry

Seems you are getting your butt hole reamed by too many Kangaroos.
Just remember, head for thinking, feet for dancing.

You ****wit.


--
For my own part, I have never had a thought which I could not set down
in words with even more distinctness than that with which I conceived
it. There is, however, a class of fancies of exquisite delicacy which
are not thoughts, and to which as yet I have found it absolutely
impossible to adapt to language. These fancies arise in the soul, alas
how rarely. Only at epochs of most intense tranquillity, when the
bodily and mental health are in perfection. And at those weird points
of time, where the confines of the waking world blend with the world of
dreams. And so I captured this fancy, where all that we see, or seem,
is but a dream within a dream.
 
K

Kyle

Master/slave settings may not be relevant if "CS" or chip select was
used for the HD settings.

The real problem is how win2k referenced the hard drives. If win2k
thought it was on the "d" drive (which is most likely the case), then
the registry will be full of path strings beginning with "d:\" and the
paths will point to non-existent files once the win98 HD is removed
from the system and the second HD becomes the boot drive, even if the
boot files are fixed properly (which might work to get win2k booted).
A repair install might get the OS working, but the other installed
programs may be lost as to where they are located on the HD, further,
the start menu will be full of old shortcuts that will point to the
wrong drive (the "d" drive instead of the "c" drive). The registry
will have countless references to the "d" drive path, and other
programs may also be lost/whacked and require reinstallation.

Perhaps the best approach if one wants to "save" the old win2k setup
is to merely edit the boot.ini file and remove the win98 reference
lines, then most all files on the win98 HD can be deleted (with the
exception of any files in the root directory). This will result in a
requirement that the win98 HD cannot be removed from the system as it
will be critical for booting.

Just my 2 cents worth.

--
Best regards,
Kyle
| dunno if this will work but...........
|
| couldn't you swap the master/slave pins around on the 2 disks
| to make win2k the master and win98 the slave....
|
| then maybe do an "ERD" (?) to repair the win2k setup (bootsector)
| so that it boots normally.......
|
| this could let you keep all your win2k stuff and let you keep the
win98
| disk as slave/storage and possibly backup disk in case the other
| stuffs up.
|
| making a backup of everything before you fart around, would also
| be a smart move.....
|
| my 2 cents
|
| regards
|
| Harry
|
|
|
|
| | > murray wrote:
| >
| > >
| > >
| > > I currently have the following Dual Boot set-up:
| > > 1-Two hard drives
| > > 2- Drive #1(Drive C) has Windows 98 installed
| > > 3- Drive #2 (Drive D) has Windows 2000 installed
| > > I would like to completely remove Windows 98 and make windows
2000 my
| > > only OS, bootable as Drive C on a single physical Hard Drive. I
would
| > > then use the freed up drive for general storage.
| > > What must I do in order to accomplish this?
| > >
| > 1) *BACKUP* the Win2K drive bymaking an exact copy to a blank HD,
same
| > or larger size, making the copy the same size as the original.
| > 2) Using that BACKUP HD, do a repair install of Win2K.
| > That should fix the problem of the Win2K initialization files
are on
| > the Win98 HD.
| > No programs, passwords, etc get changed or lost.
| > Verify that the BACKUP HD works by itself and has all of what
you
| > need from the original.
| > Use this new HD for a few months as a master / working HD,
keeping
| > the "old" drives for mister Justin Case.
| > Get yet another HD, same size for BACKUP of that new working
HD.
| > When you find no "oopsies", then the "old" Win2K drive can
become a
| > spare BACKUP HD.
| >
|
|
 
P

Pegasus \(MVP\)

Kyle said:
Master/slave settings may not be relevant if "CS" or chip select was
used for the HD settings.

The real problem is how win2k referenced the hard drives. If win2k
thought it was on the "d" drive (which is most likely the case), then
the registry will be full of path strings beginning with "d:\" and the
paths will point to non-existent files once the win98 HD is removed
from the system and the second HD becomes the boot drive, even if the
boot files are fixed properly (which might work to get win2k booted).
A repair install might get the OS working, but the other installed
programs may be lost as to where they are located on the HD, further,
the start menu will be full of old shortcuts that will point to the
wrong drive (the "d" drive instead of the "c" drive). The registry
will have countless references to the "d" drive path, and other
programs may also be lost/whacked and require reinstallation.

Indeed, and that's why the drive letter D: needs to be preserved.
This can easily be achieved, even if the Win98 disk is removed
and the Win2000 disk is the only disk in the system.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top