On Sat, 06 Oct 2007 17:15:56 -0700, Andy
<andy.lisowski@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have an Acer Aspire 5100 notebook.
>And I get NTLDR not found.
>there is only one drive on this laptop and one partition on the drive
>it seemed like it should be fine.
No. On ACER laptops, expect 3 partitions on the drive.
Two of which are visible: C: for Windows, D: for your data.
A small third one contains the recovery data.
>I could never get the install to finish. Sometime during Windows
>Install the computer would simply shut down. I never caught a glimpse
>of any type of BSOD or anything...it would just go down.
In that case: read the manual :-)
As in: you can instruct Windows to create a logfile for it's
installation attempts.
It works 2 ways: Windows will use the information in a second
attempt to install, just to avoid a known pitfall.
And you can read the log yourself and see what Windows Installer
was doing when the PC crashed.
>I assumed there must be another problem...perhaps with the
>Motherboard, RAM, or CPU but here I am...typing this on the laptop
>booted to Windows with the Hard Drive with bad sectors after letting
>it try to boot 12 times before it came up.
My suggestion would be to run MEMTEST86 first.
http://memtest86.com/ (free download !!)
Create a bootCD and boot from it.
It will tell you if the basic hardware of your laptop is sound.
If there is a problem with your Ram (timing) or CPU, it is likely
to show here.
Next thing would be to grab a 'no install OS disk' like Knoppix
(
http://knoppix.net/) or BartPE (
http://www.nu2.nu/pebuilder/)
That will exercise (almost) your entire laptop, without having to
rely on either your local harddisk or your Windows files.
You could probably even use this and try to salvage whatever is
still present on your local harddisk.
--
Kind regards,
Gerard Bok