First of all, I'm a newbie too. After using this software, I felt it was necessary to recommend it to newbie friends like myself.
A few days ago, the microcomputer in my office suddenly wouldn't boot. It wouldn't boot from either the floppy or the hard disk, the screen was black, and the floppy drive light stayed on. At first I thought it was a logic lock, so I downloaded a ROM-DOS boot disk from this forum, but it still wouldn't boot. Finally I thought of setting the hard disk parameters in CMOS to none, and then it could boot from a floppy. After booting, Sanming, DiskEdit, and NDD all couldn't operate on the hard disk, and KV3000 system recovery didn't work either. Then I suddenly remembered that I had once used bfhf.exe to back up the CMOS parameters, master boot sector parameters (including the master boot record and partition table), and DOS boot sector parameters (including the DOS boot record, disk parameters, etc.), so I pulled it out and restored them, then rebooted. Haha, I finally saw the familiar Windows screen.
From this I feel that bfhf.exe really is a good program. I recommend it to newbie friends like myself: back up the main parameters in your own microcomputer and keep them on a floppy, just in case. Hope you like it. :)
The usage is very simple:
Select "01" to back up CMOS parameters; Select "02" to restore CMOS parameters;
Select "03" to back up master boot sector parameters; Select "04" to restore master boot sector parameters;
Select "05" to back up DOS boot sector parameters; Select "06" to restore DOS boot sector parameters;
Select "07" to display the backed-up parameters; Select "08" to exit this program;
Open attachment link expired (admin note)
A few days ago, the microcomputer in my office suddenly wouldn't boot. It wouldn't boot from either the floppy or the hard disk, the screen was black, and the floppy drive light stayed on. At first I thought it was a logic lock, so I downloaded a ROM-DOS boot disk from this forum, but it still wouldn't boot. Finally I thought of setting the hard disk parameters in CMOS to none, and then it could boot from a floppy. After booting, Sanming, DiskEdit, and NDD all couldn't operate on the hard disk, and KV3000 system recovery didn't work either. Then I suddenly remembered that I had once used bfhf.exe to back up the CMOS parameters, master boot sector parameters (including the master boot record and partition table), and DOS boot sector parameters (including the DOS boot record, disk parameters, etc.), so I pulled it out and restored them, then rebooted. Haha, I finally saw the familiar Windows screen.
From this I feel that bfhf.exe really is a good program. I recommend it to newbie friends like myself: back up the main parameters in your own microcomputer and keep them on a floppy, just in case. Hope you like it. :)
The usage is very simple:
Select "01" to back up CMOS parameters; Select "02" to restore CMOS parameters;
Select "03" to back up master boot sector parameters; Select "04" to restore master boot sector parameters;
Select "05" to back up DOS boot sector parameters; Select "06" to restore DOS boot sector parameters;
Select "07" to display the backed-up parameters; Select "08" to exit this program;
Open attachment link expired (admin note)






