After a few days struggling with OSes, partitions, disk utilities and moving and copying large amounts of data among very limited HD space I finally got it working
To sum up what
didn´t help:
1. Freeing up some more space on the Music partition
2. GParted LiveCD resizing the Music partition (btw, it toke it more than two days of constant work to accomplish the task...); that
thing made things even worse: after a few reboots XP stopped giving the previous error message and would even install until it had to reboot. Trying to boot gave me
Just beautiful! This turned out to be the next "challenge"...
3. Installing Linux (yes, unlike windows, it could install without problems

) and overwriting it with windows (not really very creative idea of me...)
4.
bootcfg/rebuild,
fixboot nor
fixmbr
5.
chkdsk (including repairing file system errors and bad sectors if applicable)
What did the trick:
1. I could get an USB HD from a friend of mine to copy over the data I had access to.
2. Then I tried to install XP on my secondary HD keeping the partition I had backed up in (1) => XP wouldn´t install (see summary)
3. Wiping out the secondary HD and, of course, successful install of XP
4. Installing Acronis Disk Director Suite and putting my primary HD in the ultrabay slot: Acronis was in fact the only way to save the whole music partition. Windows didn´t want to copy the data despite the fact that the music partition had NTFS file system giving the message
Code: Select all
Windows cannot access folder or file source
but Acronis Disk Director built-in explorer feature did easily the trick.
5. After backing up my music and some other data I simply wiped out all the partitions. I then put my primary HD back into its place and could install XP without a scratch.
The End
Summary: Installing Windows XP next to another partition on the HD is most definitely a bad idea (maybe I should have tried installing it in the music partition as sufficient space was available, but I was afraid that it would overwrite parts of my music collection even though XP install program prompts about keeping the existing data on NTFS partition where there is no need for it to format). In spite of the few lost days it was a nice experience for me to find out how powerful and fast Acronis Disk Director is. Where native Windows features and linux-based tools failed, Acronis flawlessly did everything I wanted it to in order to save my data and make it possible for me to reinstall my system.
Just my 2 cents
Marin
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)