hddnewbie wrote:
Of course I can create a raw clone of the drive. Let me just google it first...
You will be Googling for a long time, to understand all the relevant info IMHO. You can search my posting history here for the word clone or cloning - I gave a bunch of info to someone recently which may help you.
Cloning is easy (although still open to human error which can be catastrophic) when disks are fully readable; it's much less easy (and needs different software) when they are not. I use ddrescue, but don't ask for a tutorial on that.
hddnewbie wrote:
The history:
I used some boot cd to do some changes to my partitions (On a drive attached to the computer just as the bad drive we are talking about)
This tool (probably) scanned all drives and found some errors. I clicked yes to fix the errors.
Thanks, but more info would help on what
exact errors were found, on the problem disk. Logical (filesystem) errors only? Were the physical disks (including the "problem disk") all fully read and no physical errors found? Without this level of detail, we can't be sure of correct diagnosis. This is why helping people via a web forum is difficult or impossible, due to the inability to get a full & correct diagnosis of a remote problem - at least within the time that people like me can spend on it.

I
suspect you had latent problems on the problem disk, which were only reported during your changes which you mention above - but that since you weren't changing the "problem" disk partitions, the actual issue is not related to the partition changes you were making. That's my best
guess, based on your info - without the disk in front of me, I could be wrong.
hddnewbie wrote:
What you are saying is that I should make an Image of the drive (using knoppix).
Then run some hex tool on the drive to make this boot sector ok.
If something goes wrong I restore everything with the Image.
Right?
It depends on what happens during the cloning, but I expect that your problem is not only with sector 0, meaning that IMHO the answer to your question will probably be "no". This is why there is much more to this than just Googling - a Googled answer may be correct for
that situation, and wrong for
yours. Without sufficient skill & experience, it can be difficult or impossible to tell whether the Googled situation applies in your case or not. (Doctors suffer this problem all the time!)
You may find that you
cannot make a perfect clone. You have choices about how and where to make that clone. Many suggestions depends on the answers or limiatations at each step. Your comments make me think you expect this to be simple - do X, run Y, otherwise Z. It could be much more complicated, with chances of human error or other problem at each stage.
Anyway, since the data isn't valuable, you can at least use this as a learning experience
