When you have tried the above methods but can't seem to fix PTEDIT32.EXE error, you can reinstall your Operating System and install a 'clean' copy of Windows onto your PC again. But this should be the last resort to fix your problem, as this will completely erase everything on your hard disk and it will take you a lot of time to reinstall all. ** Warning: older versions of ptedit.exe cannot edit the boot record of hidden NTFS partitions. There are several versions of ptedit.exe that identify themselves as 'Version 1.0', so check the file date. Versions prior to the version (filesize 494,922 bytes) reportedly have this bug.
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I have a simpletech external HDD on a HP deskPro CPU running Windows XP. I also have Partition Magic 8.0 installed. Incident: I hooked up the external drive to my Windows 7 machine to create a backup drive. The partition ended up wiping the other partitions on the HDD. I immediately pulled the plug on the external drive.
I hooked the drive up to my XP system and lost the other partitions and have PqRP as a partition now. How do I reverse the process and recover my old partition which, has photos dating back to when I first purchased the external drive? Message edited by Dale2. No, it's not that the drive and windows 7 were on different types of partitions. Apparently powerquest thought you wanted to resize the partition and the pqrp it created was an intermediate step.
Check post # 5 here: for explanation of using PTEDIT to possibly recover it. Powerquest is part of symentac now so you can download it from symantec's FTP site: ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/english_us_canada/tools/pq/utilities/ There's a ptedit and ptedit32.
Ptedit is the dos version and ptedit32 is for use in windows NT. No, it's not that the drive and windows 7 were on different types of partitions.
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Apparently powerquest thought you wanted to resize the partition and the pqrp it created was an intermediate step. Check post # 5 here: for explanation of using PTEDIT to possibly recover it. Powerquest is part of symentac now so you can download it from symantec's FTP site: ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/english_us_canada/tools/pq/utilities/ There's a ptedit and ptedit32. Ptedit is the dos version and ptedit32 is for use in windows NT.
路 Using the zip file Download ptedit.exe 路 Extract ptedit.exe from.zip. We recommend that you extract ptedit.exe to the installation directory of the program that is requesting ptedit.exe. If that doesn't work, you will have to extract ptedit.exe to your system directory. By default, this is: C: Windows System (Windows 95/98/Me) C: WINNT System32 (Windows NT/2000) C: Windows System32 (Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8) If you use a 64-bit version of Windows, you should also place ptedit.exe in C: Windows SysWOW64 Make sure overwrite any existing files (but make a backup copy of the original file).