jjzelinski
Diamond Member
- Aug 23, 2004
- 3,750
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I agree with the memory assessment. It's spitting corrupted info all over the drive. Good luck on salvaging your data 
Originally posted by: Billzie7718
Originally posted by: Phoenix86
The error (missing NTLDR) is caused by corruption on the HDD/partition/boot record.
Not being able to boot to a windows CD indicates hardware failure of the mobo/cpu/memory, or a bad disk/drive/IDE cable.
Run memtest86+ from www.memtest.com for several hours, or until it generates errors. Any errors=fail. The test won't stop until you stop it (turn the PC off).
The video card is not causing the problem.
it spins down because there is probably a problem with your hard drive. Check in BIOS to make sure it recognizes it properly ie. 20gig. Reseat the cables, remove all anything other than hard drive from one cable. CD Rom on the other.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Yeah, I'm betting it's a memory problem. Isolate the memory sticks one by one. You might try just reseating them first, though.
Originally posted by: cscpianoman
Ditto on the RAM bit. Seems like you have a direction to try. Do you know what your PSU is?
Originally posted by: Phoenix86
Download the ultimate boot cd (it has all the diag tools you will need). www.ultimatebootcd.com
If memtest is OK, it may just be a failing HDD. However, I don't think that would cause the XP setup to fail like that. Run the HDD fitness test for your HDDs manufacturer.
You have bad hardware, and it's not the video card, well that'd be the last item on my checklist. Video cards generally do not cause any of the problems you have mentioned. It's also not likely the PSU.
Are you overclocking? If so, turn set it to default.
How long did you let memtest run?
Bwahaha!!!Originally posted by: shilala
Wrong Forum.
I don't rightly give a shyt, I was just dying to use that.
Hope you get her fixed!!!
Originally posted by: Pathogen03
there were a few clicks and odd sounds..![]()
Originally posted by: PING
i seen that problem on an overclocked system too.
OP, try setting everything back to default at bios. Underclocked the mem and cpu if you have too.
oops. sorry I see that it's not overclocked. but, try to underclock it. I seen it happen to other computer with generic hardware. Note: I not saying your computer is crap. Not that there's anything wrong with generic part.
Originally posted by: Pathogen03
I cant get to any sort of prompt to be able to fdisk.
Originally posted by: secretanchitman
i think your mobo is bad. try the sticks in someone elses computer. SAVE data on HD though...just to be safe.
hope everything goes fine for you. we're always here to help...most of us that is.![]()
