Does HP recovery disk require an exact HP branded replacement?

T

Todd

Hi All,

I have a customer with an HP pavilion and a really bad
hard drive. So bad I had to disconnect it to get my diagnostic
stuff to boot and check out the rest of his system. There are
no other issues with his system.

So, I ordered out the recovery disks from HP. Then, the
customer tried to install them himself. (Bear in mind the
hard drive is still disconnected.) One of the error
prompts he got was that the hard drive was not the original
drive that come with the system.

Question: the replacement hard drive I was going to
install is definitely not a direct HP replacement. Does
anyone know if the HP recovery disk are that picky? Must
it have an exact HP branded replacement?

Many thanks,
-T

Me thinks I will just have to sell him a new copy of W7.
Pro too this time, home is evil, okay I am going overboard,
not desirable in a business network.


..
 
F

FD

Me thinks I will just have to sell him a new copy of W7.
Pro too this time, home is evil, okay I am going overboard,
not desirable in a business network.
Not necessary

If he has windows 7 home premium download the iso for windows 7 home
premium from this site.

http://www.mydigitallife.info/windo...links-ultimate-professional-and-home-premium/

Burn the DVD

Install on the new hard disk and use the Keys from the computer label
to install windows 7.

I have done that on brand new HP laptop my daughter bought and used my
win 7 OEM
Home premium disk to install a fresh copy of 7 with no HP bloatware and
downgraded from 64 to 32 bit.

It required a telephone call to Microsoft to activate

It is a 5 minute procedure that requires focussed concentration.

FD
 
E

Ed Cryer

Todd said:
Hi All,

I have a customer with an HP pavilion and a really bad
hard drive. So bad I had to disconnect it to get my diagnostic
stuff to boot and check out the rest of his system. There are
no other issues with his system.

So, I ordered out the recovery disks from HP. Then, the
customer tried to install them himself. (Bear in mind the
hard drive is still disconnected.) One of the error
prompts he got was that the hard drive was not the original
drive that come with the system.

Question: the replacement hard drive I was going to
install is definitely not a direct HP replacement. Does
anyone know if the HP recovery disk are that picky? Must
it have an exact HP branded replacement?

Many thanks,
-T

Me thinks I will just have to sell him a new copy of W7.
Pro too this time, home is evil, okay I am going overboard,
not desirable in a business network.


.
Have a look at this PDF document, particularly the bit about HP's Hard
Drive DMI Utility.
http://go2techonline.com/Documents/Tattoo_DMI_Utility_Instructions_v5.pdf

Ed
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

It is not clear to me if ANY HD is attached when doing the HP recovery.
Of course if no HD is attached, there will be an error message. Sometimes
these error messages are generic, and not at all descriptive of what it sees
as an error.
I read the original post as you did and I share your opinion: the error
message is just reporting the lack of a drive with misleading language.
 
A

Ant

Are those official servers approved by MS and with SP1?
--
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/\___/\ Ant(Dude) @ http://antfarm.ma.cx (Personal Web Site)
/ /\ /\ \ Ant's Quality Foraged Links: http://aqfl.net
| |o o| |
\ _ / If crediting, then use Ant nickname and AQFL URL/link.
( ) If e-mailing, then axe ANT from its address if needed.
Ant is currently not listening to any songs on this computer.
 
T

Todd

I read the original post as you did and I share your opinion: the error
message is just reporting the lack of a drive with misleading language.
I finally got through to an English as their first language
tech support guy at HP. (He sounded like an American. The
English as a second language folks kept misunderstanding
what I was asking.) He said that particular rescue build
was custom for that machine and the it had to be used with
exactly the same drive as preexisted before. Geez!

The error about not being the right drive was that even a missing
drive is not the preexisting drive. (Zero is a number.)

Thank you for all the help,
-T
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

I finally got through to an English as their first language
tech support guy at HP. (He sounded like an American. The
English as a second language folks kept misunderstanding
what I was asking.) He said that particular rescue build
was custom for that machine and the it had to be used with
exactly the same drive as preexisted before. Geez!
The error about not being the right drive was that even a missing
drive is not the preexisting drive. (Zero is a number.)
Thank you for all the help,
-T
And thanks for the follow-up.

I don't mind being wrong, but I *do* mind that HP seems to have made a
Draconian choice in this situation.
 
W

...winston

C

cameo

I read the original post as you did and I share your opinion: the error
message is just reporting the lack of a drive with misleading language.
That brings up a question I've been wondering about: could one boot with
a bootable thumb drive when a HD is missing? This could be useful when I
have to send in my laptop for a repair but would want to hold onto the
HD for security reasons.
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

That brings up a question I've been wondering about: could one boot with a
bootable thumb drive when a HD is missing? This could be useful when I have
to send in my laptop for a repair but would want to hold onto the HD for
security reasons.
I believe the answer is yes, but it must be supported in the BIOS.

I don't want to reboot to see what my BIOS offers, since I'm on a roll
:) but I believe some software I have, or have looked at, has offered
an option to set up a bootable thumb drive. That would imply that the
programmers think some BIOSes will support it.

I can misremember, of course, so let's see what others have to say.
 
C

Char Jackson

I believe the answer is yes, but it must be supported in the BIOS.

I don't want to reboot to see what my BIOS offers, since I'm on a roll
:) but I believe some software I have, or have looked at, has offered
an option to set up a bootable thumb drive. That would imply that the
programmers think some BIOSes will support it.

I can misremember, of course, so let's see what others have to say.
I have a USB drive that I've made bootable, so yes, it works fine. I
found the procedure online somewhere and use it when I need a quick
way to start a broken system and have my various repair tools at hand.
 
C

cameo

I have a USB drive that I've made bootable, so yes, it works fine. I
found the procedure online somewhere and use it when I need a quick
way to start a broken system and have my various repair tools at hand.
My laptop's BIOS also allows booting from USB drives but it is not
clear to me whether the HD still has to be there as well.
 
C

Char Jackson

My laptop's BIOS also allows booting from USB drives but it is not
clear to me whether the HD still has to be there as well.
I don't see why it would need the hard drive, unless you take steps to
put something on the USB drive that needs to access the hard drive.
 

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