I use both Macs and PCs, and I am very familiar with a couple of Mac utilities to turn to if your operating system doesn't show up, but I don't know any reliable ones for the Windows platform.
Here's how I have my computer setup:
1 main drive for the OS (Windows 7 Ultimate with SP1 and all updates), the programs, and a folder for iTunes, etc.
1 secondary drive for samples and musical backups
1 tertiary drive for recording, which is where I record to before then transferring materials to the secondary drive for backup.
All three are periodically backed up to their own separate drives.
However, before my last scheduled backup, my main OS and program stopped responding.
I know it is not a drive failure because I can load this drive into another computer and see it fine. On a Mac, I would run a program like DiskWarrior to fix its Master Boot Record, or Directory, as the OS X folks call it, but on the Windows side of things, I don't know what utilities to use.
I looked into using the Command line of my secondary computer, but I wasn't sure how to use the various commands to diagnose the main drive.
Here's what I've tried so far:
I tried restarting from my original Windows 7 Ultimate disc, but it doesn't recognize that there is an operating system on the problem disc, and so won't run any repairs.
I did run a chkdsk on the problem drive from my other Windows computer, and it reported no problems on the drive.
Here's the stats from the non working computer:
Asus motherboard with an AMD processor, 16gb of RAM, an NVIDIA video card, and the three hard drives I mentioned earlier. I have a MOTU 828mkIII as an audio interface, using a PCI firewire card using a Texas Instrument chipset.
I'm puzzled that the non working drive won't even go back to a previous restore point.
Or that the problem drive doesn't show an operating system at all.
Worst case, is there anyway to get my data off without having to go all the way back to my previous backup? Like all people in this situation, it's been too long since my last backup, and it would mean days of reinstalling various programs... sigh. These things always seem to go at the worst time, eh?
My main question: out of all the various Windows Repair programs available, are any of them reliable? Likely to fix this problem? It seems to me that there's something wrong with the 'directory' on my problem drive.
