Mooney Posted November 4, 2007 Share Posted November 4, 2007 So I installed the hard drive from my old computer in my new computer as a slave drive. I can access most of it just fine, but when I try to get to E:\Documents and Settings\Mooney it says "... is not accessible. Access is denied." I'm guessing that's because it was a password protected Administrator account on my last comp. Any ideas how I can access this dir? I've tried using Sudowin, but it always says "Sudowin service is dead to you." Do I have to boot into safe mode to use Sudowin? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ken_cinder Posted November 4, 2007 Share Posted November 4, 2007 That's extremely odd, I've moved drives into other machines that contain the system partition and had no problem accessing a USER folder, even an Admin one. Maybe theres a conflict in ID's? Trying running a CHKDSK on that drive and then accessing it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robert Posted November 4, 2007 Share Posted November 4, 2007 Maybe he has full security turned on, like I do. Mooney, right-click on the folder that's denied to you, choose Properties, click on Security. Depends on the OS, if there is a checkbox for Allow Inheritable permissions, blah blah, tick it, click ok. If there isn't, click on Add, type in Everyone, ok ok. If the security tab is missing, make sure you are an Adminstrator.If the security tab is all greyed out, you need to take ownership first. I'll expain that if the above stuff doesn't work. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kloplop321 Posted November 4, 2007 Share Posted November 4, 2007 he is an administrator.although, Administrator isn't the highest, SYSTEM is, but I can't find the link to the TuT that explains how to get in it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Reaper man Posted November 15, 2007 Share Posted November 15, 2007 So I installed the hard drive from my old computer in my new computer as a slave drive. I can access most of it just fine, but when I try to get to E:\Documents and Settings\Mooney it says "... is not accessible. Access is denied." I'm guessing that's because it was a password protected Administrator account on my last comp. Any ideas how I can access this dir? I've tried using Sudowin, but it always says "Sudowin service is dead to you." Do I have to boot into safe mode to use Sudowin? change the file system to FAT32 ;p Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mooney Posted November 24, 2007 Author Share Posted November 24, 2007 Bump. I ran chkdsk, defragged, and did a virus scan with AVG just to make sure, but I still can't access that one folder. Any other ideas (No, I will not format it) are welcome... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Reaper man Posted November 24, 2007 Share Posted November 24, 2007 my only guess it that it's NTFS formatted and it's "owned" by an account no longer on the system. Like I said, change the file system to FAT32 and it should be fine. :3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hairytash Posted November 26, 2007 Share Posted November 26, 2007 You must be logged on to the computer with an account that has administrative credentials. If you are running Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition, you must start the computer in safe mode, and then log on with an account that has Administrative rights to have access to the Security tab. If you are using Windows XP Professional, you must disable Simple File Sharing. By default, Windows XP Professional uses Simple File sharing when it is not joined to a domain. To take ownership of a folder, follow these steps: 1.Right-click the folder that you want to take ownership of, and then click Properties. 2.Click the Security tab, and then click OK on the Security message (if one appears). 3.Click Advanced, and then click the Owner tab. 4.In the Name list, click your user name, or click Administrator if you are logged in as Administrator, or click the Administrators group. If you want to take ownership of the contents of that folder, select the Replace owner on subcontainers and objects check box. 5.Click OK, and then click Yes when you receive the following message: You do not have permission to read the contents of directory folder name. Do you want to replace the directory permissions with permissions granting you Full Control? All permissions will be replaced if you press Yes. Note folder name is the name of the folder that you want to take ownership of. 6.Click OK, and then reapply the permissions and security settings that you want for the folder and its contents. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ben2dx Posted November 30, 2007 Share Posted November 30, 2007 thanks for info ive been having same problem Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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