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5 answers

If Dell's tools won't work, get yourself a copy of Norton Ghost and use that instead - easy to use and will do what you are after

2006-11-12 14:41:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A "restore disc" can only be obtained from Dell. A backup disc can be made with many download programs found on the net.

2006-11-09 06:29:46 · answer #2 · answered by gntolng 4 · 0 0

Ask and you will receive. You can create a Windows Installation/ Recovery CD from the installation files on your hard drive. Lincoln Spector, a writer at PC World Magazine, wrote a great article with step-by-step instructions on how to do create one. Below, you will find the reference as well as the contents of the article.

"Create a Windows CD for PCs That Don't Have One" -- written by Lincoln Spector, pcworld.com. (http://pcworld.com/article/id,122487-page,1/article.html?findid=51120)

Microsoft requires that every PC bundled with Windows provide some way of restoring the operating system, but too many bundled Windows XP "restore" CDs merely return your hard drive to its factory condition, which wipes out all of your data and any apps you've added.

Fortunately, vendors appear to be moving away from these data-wiping recovery discs. I recently looked at new PCs from ABS, Dell, Gateway, Lenovo, and WinBook, all of which came with either a real Windows XP CD or another way to perform nondestructive OS reinstalls.

If your PC lacks a Windows CD, a folder named 'i386' containing the Windows installation files is probably in the root directory of drive C: or in your C:\Windows folder. Your system may have several i386 folders, but the one you want has a lot of files with extensions ending in underscores (_), along with the executable files expand.exe, regedit.exe, and winnt32.exe. Copy this folder onto a CD for safekeeping, though you'll use the version on the hard drive to actually reinstall Windows.

Keep your 25-character Windows Product Key handy--you'll need it to reinstall the OS. The number is on the back of your PC, on the bottom of your notebook, or in some other hard-to-read spot; it may be listed in the documentation as well.

You'll also need a bootable CD for starting the install process. Bart Lagerweij's free PE Builder creates a CD-bootable version of XP called Bart's Pre-install Environment, or BartPE, from either a Windows CD or the i386 folder. Click here to download PE Builder (http://www.nu2.nu/pebuilder/).

Open PE Builder's main dialog box and select the folder or drive containing your i386 folder, but not the folder itself. Check Create ISO image, click Burn to CD, and select your CD-RW drive from the Device drop-down menu. If PE Builder doesn't support your burner, double-click the PE Builder--created .iso file to launch your CD authoring program and burn the CD.

To reinstall Windows, boot from the BartPE CD you just created and select Go, Programs, A43 File Management Utility (see Figure 1). Navigate to the hard drive's i386 folder (do not use the i386 folder on the CD). Double-click winnt32.exe to start the installation process. When the installation program closes, reboot your PC, remove the CD, and select Microsoft Windows XP Setup from the resulting boot menu. The installation will pick up where it left off.


Download link for Bart PE (http://find.pcworld.com/49064)

2006-11-09 06:37:34 · answer #3 · answered by What the...?!? 6 · 0 0

call dell ask for restore cd to be sent or ask how you can creat one if you can from pc . look in start menu list to see if there is software on ur pc to creat ur pc restore cd .if not call dell

2006-11-09 06:34:44 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

call dell, they will send you one for free if you ask.

2006-11-09 06:29:56 · answer #5 · answered by thunder2sys 7 · 0 0

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