by ElMugroso on Mon May 07, 2012 3:44 am
Hi,
With Boot-Repair if chose FIX MBR, what that does is put the MBR "standard" which means there will be no GRUB. Partitions are not deleted, and therefore the booting is automatically to the operating system that is in the FIRST partion.
That will certainly boot to Windows XP when the pc is turned ON. You shouldn't see any GRUB menu if you did choose the option to FIX MBR with Boot-Repair.
So, should see no GRUB menu, and pc will try to boot windows XP and hopefully, it does that. If you see no GRUB menu, XP tries to boot, but does not boot, then there is indeed a problem confined to XP only. Like, for example, something in the start-up files of XP.
You list to have a partition called (4.7G SERVICEV001 Compaq diagnostics FAT32 not mounted sda2), which is strange to have, since your computer is a Lenovo, and not a Compaq. Besides, it is weird that that partion is FAT-32. What is the purpose of that partition? Seems to me that if it has Compaq utilities that if run during XP, could create problems to XP. If not needed, maybe that partition should be deleted.
Seems to me what your first objective is to boot Windows, to recover that system, once XP boots by itself, you can always re-install Mint. So, you just need to do a FIX-MBR, again, so that you have a "standard" MBR, forgetting of GRUB.
When you boot Boot-Repair, it is best to have no external hard disk or pen-drives connected to the pc, no printer, NOTHING. Just the minimum to boot.
Also, when one copies files or downloads stuff, while being at Linux, to an NTFS partition, that can create some problems when booting to Windows. That is because some file names that are legal in Linux, are illegal in Windows, but Linux can and will write them to an NTFS partition because the filenames are OK at Linux. It may not be the case, but you say you copied files, or moved them while at Linux. So, maybe try to figure if that could be the problem, and if so, try to revert that, if you can boot into Linux. If PC does boot into Linux, you can do that, then. Move those files to a usb pen drive, separate folder. If you can not boot to any thing (neither window nor Linux) then you boot with a live linux distro, and check the files in windows partion (the very first one in the H.disk), specially "ini" files, or "auto exec" files that tell XP what do run during start-up.
Summary: if XP tries to boot and no GRUB menu appears, when PC is turned ON, then yes, you need to fix Windows so it boots again. Linux installation may be in its own partitions, but it does not get involved. So, forget Linux and fix Windows so it boots. Install re-install Linux AFTER XP boots OK. Before re-install, prepare your partitions, best if delete the previous Linux partitions, and THAT Compaq partition that is questionable.
You can also start by rescuing your data FIRST to a USB stick or drive, to be on the safe side, and you can use, again, a Liux-Live distro to do that. That, is also done when the boot sector has been fixed to "standard" by any "fix-mbr", one good one for that being Boot-Repair.
If you need Windows, never delete the first partion, because that is where Windows is for most pc's which come with it pre-installed. And, as long as the first partition is there, it can usually be fixed to boot.
Hope all goes well.