This is a tough one. Nobody has been able to help me with it yet. Hope somebody here can!
I am no longer able to access the volume on disk 0 after a clean XP installation on disk 1.
The new installation is on disk 1, a NTFS 120GB Raid 2 array.
The ex-D: drive from the previous XP installation is now disk 0, a NTFS 128GB IDE drive for backup and archiving. This drive contains 40GB of vital data.
On the previous XP installation I had moved the page file from C: to D: for performance reasons.
Before formatting C:, to make a new installation of XP, I did not remove the page file from D:.
The new installation of XP has no knowledge of the ex-D: as I disconnected the drive before the new XP installation to avoid XP installing on disk 0 or endangering its contents.
After reconnecting disk 0, the new XP installation does not assign a drive letter to it, nor recognize the partition on the ex-D:. This drive and its folders do not appear in any XP program or utility.
The physical drive appears properly in Device Manager and in Disk Manager with no drive letter. Open, Explore and Properties are not available for this volume. There is no apparent way to read the drive contents.
I assume Disk Manager uses the DISKPART ASSIGN LETTER command to assign drive letters. This command will not assign drive letters on a NTFS volume that contains a pagefile.
Though I can find no confirmation of this anywhere, it appears that on startup XP sees pagefile.sys on a partition that is neither a boot drive nor a system volume, and does not assign a drive letter nor mount that volume.
Whereas disk 0 is listed in Disk Manager as healthy, active and online, its partition is inaccessible.
How can I rescue this drive with no risk to its contents?