seedubya
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 1,019
- Location
- Carlow, Ireland
This is a favour for my daughter, currently in training as a network tech, with a government department. If it was a client I'd tell them to recover the data and move on but however...
Her laptop, running Windows 10 Pro 1809 suffered a kernel power error and restarted. When it came back up she got a no bootable device found error. Being a budding tech herself she attempted to fix the problem. Found that the drive had lost all its partitions but managed to recover those but still no boot. Then she tried the usual bootrec commands to fix the booting situation but to no avail. After this her explanation gets a bit hazy. I think she may have tried deleting and re-creating the system reserved partition and/or the recovery partition. Here's a pic of what the partitions look like now.
I also think the drive was originally GPT but now it's MBR!! All of the data is intact on the main partition. She would REALLY like to get the OS booting again without having to resolve to N&P.
Possible, do you think?
Her laptop, running Windows 10 Pro 1809 suffered a kernel power error and restarted. When it came back up she got a no bootable device found error. Being a budding tech herself she attempted to fix the problem. Found that the drive had lost all its partitions but managed to recover those but still no boot. Then she tried the usual bootrec commands to fix the booting situation but to no avail. After this her explanation gets a bit hazy. I think she may have tried deleting and re-creating the system reserved partition and/or the recovery partition. Here's a pic of what the partitions look like now.

I also think the drive was originally GPT but now it's MBR!! All of the data is intact on the main partition. She would REALLY like to get the OS booting again without having to resolve to N&P.
Possible, do you think?