|  The information in this article applies to:Microsoft Windows NT operating system version 3.1
Microsoft Windows NT Advanced Server version 3.1
 
 SYMPTOMS
After a Windows NT Setup message appears indicating Setup has detected a
Boot Manager partition, the text mode portion of Windows NT setup
completes. After Setup reboots your computer, the machine boots from the
operating system on drive C. You cannot continue installing Windows NT.
 
 CAUSE
Installing Windows NT when the IBM OS/2 2.1 Boot Manager partition is
active corrupts the Boot Manager partition. Setup fails because it does not
copy the proper files to drive C.
 
 RESOLUTIONYou should be able to boot both Windows NT and IBM OS/2 2.1.Install IBM OS/2 2.1 and create a 100 megabyte partition for OS/2.
Install IBM OS/2 2.1 Boot Manager at the end of the first partition.
After installing IBM OS/2 2.1 create the partition you want to use for
   Windows NT.
Make the unformatted partition active.
Insert the Windows NT Setup diskette into drive A and restart the
   computer.
   When the system boots the following message appears:
 
       Setup has found Boot Manager on your system and must disable it
      to complete Windows NT installation.  Boot Manager will not be
      destroyed, un-installed, or otherwise altered by this operation.
      You can re-enable Boot Manager from Windows NT after setup is
      complete by using Disk Administrator to mark the Boot Manager
      Partition active. Refer to your system guide for more information
      about Disk Administrator.
   When Windows NT Setup has completed the installation it restarts your
   computer. Windows NT should boot.
Re-enable IBM OS/2 2.1 Boot Manager. To do this, start Windows NT Disk
   Administrator, mark the Boot Manager partition as active, and then
   restart the computer.
Choose to boot from OS/2.
Run OS/2 FDISK and select Add to Boot Manager.
Add the Windows NT partition to the IBM OS/2 2.1 Boot Manager.
 
 STEPS TO REPRODUCE PROBLEMThe computer boots OS/2 2.1 from the active partition C. Since that
partition contains Boot Manager, you receive and error message indication
NTLDR cannot be found.Starting with a disk that has no partitions defined, setup a 100
   megabyte C partition for OS/2. Install OS/2 on and enable
   Boot Manager. If you have a 200 megabyte drive, you will have a 1
   megabyte partition for Boot Manager, a 100 megabyte partition for OS/2,
   and a 99 megabyte unformatted partitioned.
Add the OS/2 partition to the Boot Manager menu using FDISKPM.
Create a file allocation table (FAT) partition using all of the unused
   space on the drive.
   You should now have the following partitions:
 
       Boot manager
      C: partition with OS/2 installed
      D: partition formatted with Fat
Use FDISKPM to ensure that the Boot Manager partition is the active
   partition.
Install Windows NT onto drive D.
   Windows NT Setup detects the Boot Manager partition and displays a
   message indicating that Setup has detected the Boot Manager partition.
   The message says that Setup will disable the partition during
   installation and reactivate it after Setup is complete.
Proceed through the text-mode portion of Setup.
 
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