[Coco] OT: Recovery Disc set for Dell Inspiron 15 3520...
Al Hartman
alhartman6 at optonline.net
Thu Aug 27 16:57:31 EDT 2015
I hate to have to pay for them, but since you recommend them... I ordered a
set.
My time is too valuable to waste.
Thanks!
-[ Al ]-
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Seagrove
I get restore disks from www.restoredisks.com and they are a very reliable
business. Comes recommended by many repair techs I deal with. I have used
them multiple times.
Tom
On Aug 27, 2015, at 1:54 PM, Al Hartman <alhartman6 at optonline.net> wrote:
I've been able to access the partition, but the recovery program won't run
to make the discs or a CD key.
The two files that make the discs are in a format called .WIM which are a
special Microsoft compressed format, and are not ISO files. There is not an
easy way to convert these to an ISO file to burn them. Every way I've tried
has failed. Dell has been rude and unhelpful. My only hope has been to find
someone else with the same model of laptop running the same version of
Windows to run the Recovery program to burn me a set of Discs.
There are companies that claim to sell the discs, but I don't trust they are
free of malware.
If something doesn't turn up in the next few days, I'll have to live with a
generic Windows install and not have all the apps that came with the laptop
when I bought it (DVD player, Roxio Burn software, etc...) I can replace
most of it shareware/freeware. But I paid for the registered stuff and I'd
like to have them back.
-[ Al ]-
-----Original Message----- From: Bill Pierce via Coco
Al, most (if not all) computer distributers now use the separate hidden
partition (can't remember what it's called) on the HD as the recovery disk
(which in the case of drive failure is useless), which is created on the fly
as the system is installed. This reduced the cost of adding (and keeping up
with) recovery disks as well as upped their profit margin.
If the drive will still spin and can be read (master boot sector trashed?),
then the recovery partition could be accessed. "EasyBCD" is a boot sector
recovery system and "PTEdit" will let you access the recovery disk (hidden
from windows and dos). I have had to do this a couple of times.
Of course, if the drive is mechanically disabled, you are out of luck :-(
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