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Partition Sector

On hard (fixed) disk drives, the very first sector is the partition sector (often known as the Master Boot Record [MBR] or partition table). Each physical hard disk drive has one of these sectors. 

A single physical disk can be partitioned into one or more logical disks. For example, you may have a physical drive partitioned into C: and D: logical disks so that your single physical disk appears (to DOS) to be two logical disks. The single partition sector contains the information that describes both logical disks. If the partition sector is damaged, then DOS may not even recognize that your disk exists.

The partition sector also contains a program that is executed every time you power up or boot your PC. The program part of the partition sector is often called the Master Boot Record (MBR) and this term is often used to include both the program half and data 
half of the sector. The MBR executes and reads the DOS boot sector that also contains a program. Many viruses plant their code in the MBR. Some of these leave the partition data alone; some hide it in another location on the disk; some even move and 
encrypt that information.

Note: It's important to use a good anti-virus program to fix any MBR infections. Because some viruses move and encrypt the partition information, if you remove them from the MBR using generic DOS techniques (e.g., the DOS FDISK program with an undocumented parameter) you can cause more problems than you had with the virus.