Thanks for that response Bowtie, but it's not the BIOS.Īfter the Ghost 'Clone' the computer reboots, at that time I pulled the lead for the original boot drive and placed it in the new drive, so it's on the same physical location on the Promise SATA bus as the original boot drive was. You to do this then I suggest that you throw it away and by BootItNG Now you can boot into XP in its new position. Enter the "Work with Partitions" Dialog. The method I used to clear the disk signatures was to run BootItNG then do You slide or move a bootable Win2K/XP partition and another partition isĪdded or moved to start where the bootable Win2K/XP partition was. In the MBR at the time the duplicated partition is booted. A bootable Win2K/XP partition is duplicated and the original partition is This can cause problems to arise in the following situations:
"A problem is preventing Windows from accurately checking the licence for Partition at boot time it will take this as drive C: and assign itself the That it records a signature for each partition, and if it sees its original
The only problem with swapping XP to a different drive is Manager for several years, and this allows each OS to see itself as drive C: I have used BootItNG from as my paritioning tool and boot Was happy with XP I wanted to swap it to the 27GB drive because it was I use to haveĪ copy of WinME on a 27GB drive and a copy of WinXP on a 6GB drive. This is not a problem because I have done the very same thing. Hope this helps you if you encountered the same problem. Hey, never bother guys, I found this on the net (thanks Tony).