Hi Guys, You guys may realize me from the Packard Bell Thread. I got a Packard Bell Platinum 1 and replaced the hard drive for a 2GB Compact Flash, the original hard drive was 1.2GB. Now, I tried using my Original Packard Bell Master CD Version: 170580 and the Restore & Recovery Floppy Version 2.2W. When I put the media into the appropriate drive, and boot the computer; it says 'Insert bootable media into the appropriate drive.' It was supposed to go into the Packard Bell Restore Menu, not say this. The original owner I got this computer from, said the he used the Master CD and Restore & Recovery Floppy before, but he was not specific on how he used them. I think I might have the wrong Restore & Recovery Floppy. Master Cd Packard Bell Torrent Free Downloads, List 1 - Download master cd packard bell torrent software. I might need to get Version 2.3W as said in this thread, I tried a different Master CD for Windows 95 B and it worked and got to the Restore Menu. Only problem is that there is some software on the original Master CD that came with this computer. I have a video link, please take a look and help me out. I never had experienced this before. Thanks Everyone. Message edited by Anuextreme117. I think I mentioned in a PM that the floppy disk or drive might be bad. Regardless of the disk version it should boot up. I assume that's not happening? You might try a dos bootdisk from someplace like bootdisk.com just to see if it boots OK from a floppy. Also if you take a look at the floppy--the config.sys, autoexec.bat and the files they call and then check the cd files--you might be able to figure out how to start the restore with a different disk. I never used any of those disks. I just accumulated them from various places over the years. The floppies may or may not be the versions that originally came with the restore cd's. Sorry I haven't send the PB sound cards yet. There's 6 or 7 or them I think but I just haven't boxed them up and taken them to the post office. People moved in and rearranged my junk so I've been busy trying to make room. Don't forget to preorder your Hatch green chili for this fall. Many vendors ship world-wide. Better hurry. They're picking and shipping now. Your POST screens simply show the floppy and CD drive are recognized by the BIOS. Have you entered the BIOS (setup) screens and set the boot order to floppy first, CD second, hard drive third? If the computer is booting to the hard drive first, then that would explain the message you see. BTW, IF you are going to show us the labels on disks, leave them in front of the camera long enough to read the labels. I don't know anything about how Packard Bell worked when Windows 95 was in use, but I am not aware of any recovery disks. Only the full version of Win95. As riider stated above, you installed starting with a DOS prompt and command line. Then went to the floppy disk to start the process. Let's inspect what possibilities we can get when trying to get the 2's complement of a bit string. In the initial state you could get a 1 whose 1's complement is 0 and with a carry in hand equals to 1. There are at least 2 ways to get the 2's complement of a number in a SIPO shift register: direct combinatorial logic. Take the 4 bits of the value, (simultaneously) invert all the bits and (simultaneously) add one. Design a serial 2's complementer with a shift register and a flip flop. The binary number is shifted out from one side and it's 2's complementer shifted in to the other side of the shift register. Design a serial 2's complementer using this procedure. The circuit needs a shift register to store the binary number and an SR flip flop to be set when the first least significant 1 occurs. An XOR gate can be used to transfer the unchanged bits (x[xor]0=x) or complement the bits (x[xor]1=x'). Serial 2 s complementer shift register. Why do you insist on using the Pack Bell discs? I'm sure they're loaded with crapware. How about using a retail Win95 CD instead? You can always copy over the crapware afterwards. Get the Win95C image at the following link. It's in.7z format so you'll need 7-zip or peazip to unpack it. After you unpack it, open the folder to find the win95c_osr25.iso file. You can then burn it to a CD using imgburn or similar software. Download the Win95 boot floppy creator from here: After you've created the disks, make sure you have the HDD installed & the boot order configured correctly in the BIOS, then boot up with both the floppy & CD in the drives. EDIT: if you need a key, look here: message edited by riider. Riider, I do not want to do that method because it will destroy my Compact Flash by running SCANDISK.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |