> >Excellent! Sounds like you will have to do this every time the kernel > >updates. ... > > False. He will need to do this every time GRUB is updated. After GRUB > files have moved around in /boot, anything that writes to /boot, such as a > Kernel update, can trigger the issue by overwriting the free blocks that > had previously been GRUB Stage 2. See `info grub` for how the GRUB > bootsector finds GRUB Stage 2. > -- > ____________________________________________________________________ > TonyN.:' <mailto:tonynelson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > ' <http://www.georgeanelson.com/> Makes sense. It didn't sound right to have to do it when a new kernel was added. But having never used this method before I was guessing based on when his error occurred. Good to know the correct reason. Jacques B.