X-Authentication-Warning: delorie.com: mailnull set sender to opendos-bounces using -f Message-ID: <3C87603E.A25DF3FD@rogers.com> Date: Thu, 07 Mar 2002 07:42:38 -0500 From: jovra Organization: @Home Network X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.05 [en]C-AtHome0404 (Win95; U) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: opendos AT delorie DOT com Subject: Re: 2nd FAT? References: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Authentication-Info: Submitted using SMTP AUTH LOGIN at fep04-mail.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com from [24.42.207.61] using ID at Thu, 7 Mar 2002 07:51:04 -0500 Reply-To: opendos AT delorie DOT com I may be wrong and the following certainly applies to a primary partition, because I have no experience w/ logical or secondary partitions, but AFAIK : - If Norton cannot repair FAT#1 when FAT#@ is still there, may be the message sent by Norton is wrong ! - To make a physical copy of FAT#2 over FAT#1 : Write it block wise - a tool like Norton DISKEDIT (a nice tool) does the job : It offers the following functionality : - Select + Copy a certain number of bytes in a sector of your choice - Paste into the sector of your choice --Good Luck Dominic Winston wrote: > > Hi! > > I have a hard drive that crashed. It was formatted, with several logical partitions, under DR-DOS 5.0; and I had DR-DOS 5.0 and Windows 3.1 installed on it. It crashed during a Windows 3.1 freeze-up. I managed to get into the crashed drive and found that, in each sector, the primary FAT of each logical drive was corrupted. But, according to Norton Utilities, the second copy of the FAT is still ok. > > So my question is... how can the (apparently) intact second copy of the FAT be copied over the corrupted first copy of the FAT? Would doing that bring my directories and files back? And, if so, is there a method to replace FAT number one with the FAT number two? Norton Utilities doesn't seem to be able to do this directly and I've searched for a command-line utility to do this but to no avail. Why does DOS have two FAT's if one FAT can't easily be used to restore the other?? > > Any ideas? > > Nick > > Is your boss reading your email? ....Probably > Keep your messages private by using Lycos Mail. > Sign up today at http://mail.lycos.com