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Invalid or damaged bootable partition


Webb

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I have this computer. When I turned it on this morning I got the message "Invalid or damaged Bootable partition".

 

I have "One Key Recovery" that will rewrite the HD to factory settings but that seems a little drastic.

 

I also have a Norton Ghost image that is a few months old. There is no way to test the integrity of the image before using it.

 

My research says I may have a damaged MBR and if I can restore it that will fix the problem. The only bootable medium I have is a Linux Mint 17 DVD. Can I repair the MBR with it? How? Could it be some other problem?

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I have this computer. When I turned it on this morning I got the message "Invalid or damaged Bootable partition".

 

I have "

I have this computer. When I turned it on this morning I got the message "Invalid or damaged Bootable partition".

 

I have "One Key Recovery" that will rewrite the HD to factory settings but that seems a little drastic.

 

I also have a Norton Ghost image that is a few months old. There is no way to test the integrity of the image before using it.

 

My research says I may have a damaged MBR and if I can restore it that will fix the problem. The only bootable medium I have is a Linux Mint 17 DVD. Can I repair the MBR with it? How? Could it be some other problem?

" that will rewrite the HD to factory settings but that seems a little drastic.

 

I also have a Norton Ghost image that is a few months old. There is no way to test the integrity of the image before using it.

 

My research says I may have a damaged MBR and if I can restore it that will fix the problem. The only bootable medium I have is a Linux Mint 17 DVD. Can I repair the MBR with it? How? Could it be some other problem?

The first thing I'd do is boot the Mint DVD and run gparted to check the HDD. You should see at least three partitions. The boot partition, the recovery partition and the main partition. If you don't see those partitions or the partitions have a yellow flag, then the HDD is probably bad.
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SOLVED.

 

I left a MP3 player plugged in to a USB port.

 

I had previously made some changes to the BIOS/UEFI to prevent the machine booting only from HD and it was looking to the USB for boot information.

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