I have tried Winrar, as well. Sorry, should have posted this information.
Winrar even says that the file is corrupt.

On Thu, Mar 26, 2009 at 9:43 AM, James Rankin <[email protected]> wrote:

> Winrar can let you look at an iso file, don't know whether it is
> format-dependent or not though
>
> 2009/3/26 Daniel Rodriguez <[email protected]>
>
>  Background: I have been brought in to help an organization try to recover
>> a server that died. Server is now back up and online. The system had two
>> partitions, a C: Drive and D: Drive. When the server was up and running an
>> admin would do image backups to a Linux box. These images are in
>> <filename>.iso. One is for the C: and the other is for D:.
>>
>> Issue: When trying to install the C: drive ISO back to the C: Drive on the
>> server it is not completing... getting to about 99% and then it stalls. They
>> have been using G4L (Ghost for Linux) to create these ISO images. When it is
>> 'burning' the ISO image file to the C: Drive I notice that G4L shows the
>> following:
>>
>> *<filename>.iso [FAT]*
>> **
>> Does the [FAT] mean that it is writting the data back to that partion in
>> the older FAT-12/16 format? If so, that would explain why we can't boot that
>> from that drive.
>>
>> Have tried using MagicISO and Virtual Clone Drive to mount the ISO image.
>> But when I try to do that, I keep getting an error that the ISO image is
>> corrupt.
>>
>> Would like to do the following; Run G4L and write the ISO to the D: Drive,
>> I have C: drive up and running in Windows 2003 Server, and then use some
>> utility to look at that data on that partition. Need to know if there is a
>> utility that would allow me to 'look' at that drive if it is in a different
>> format.
>>
>> Ideas?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>

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