VISTA - XP BSOD OWNED! INTEL G33 NO HELP PLEASE SAVE ME!

wowcheesestick

Junior Member
Apr 2, 2008
10
0
0
So I bought a high performace vista based system from gateway.
GREAT. 400 SATA drive quad core 2.4 8500gt BLAHBLAH
this piece of shit isnt stable at all so my dumbass tried to downgrade to XP

bang, BSOD, after researching, its a common problem
i get the bsod after copying all the files from the xp disc, i read the forums and said its because ACHI drivers arent installed.
im kinda of a newbie so i dont really know what that means

i tried to search for ACHI drivers and downloaded from intel website
http://downloadcenter.intel.co...ing%20Systems&lang=eng



and it tells me my poor laptop cant install it, so now i cant even get the files that Nlite needs to put in the cd to boot...

can someone please help me


edit: i have INTEL G33 which is kinda rare i belive
 

wowcheesestick

Junior Member
Apr 2, 2008
10
0
0
i am reinstalling windows vista and then I will do a low level format.. will that help? someone please help lol
i ran out of blank cds and i have no floppy drive, so i dont know what i can do ugh
 

Harvey

Administrator<br>Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
35,059
73
91
More info about the machine would help. Start with the model, and the chipset, if you know it.

There are a number of things you need to know and do before upgrading from Vista to XP. Following is a rewrite of a long reply I gave to another member's question awhile ago.It's got a lot of the info you need.

I successfully removed Vista from a new HP Pavilion a1520n and got it completely working with XP. Some of what I found may be unique to HP's specific setup, but what I learned may give others some clues about what to check to install XP on similar systems. Others are welcome to add their tips and experiences.

HP and Compaq no longer provide restore disks. Instead, their systems will create ONE set of DVD's or CD's which is bonded to the machine that creates them. Other manufacturers may do the same. Therefore, before you start, make sure you have your restore disks. You may need to restore Vista for warranty service.

DO YOUR HOMEWORK. Before I started, I searched Google for the HP model number + install + XP. I found that a lot of people have tried to do it and failed on this particular machine.

1. One important thing I learned is that Vista does some strange things to the partition table. The HP had two partitions, one of which was used for restore purposes. It has to go. See below for ways to do that.

2. In the CMOS, look to see if the drive is set for ATA or RAID. If it's set for RAID, change it to ATA.

I used Partition Magic, booting from a floppy, to remove them. You can also boot to the Partition Magic CD.

As it was booting, the program gave me a message that something was wrong with the first partition and asked if I wanted it to fix the problem. I clicked "Yes," and that was the end of that problem. I could then remove both partitions and set up a single, active standard NTFS partition.

If your machine doesn't have a floppy, you may be able to do the same thing booting from a flash drive with the program. You can use HP's DriveKey program to make a bootable USB Flash drive and copy the command line version of Partition Magic to it. I used to be able to find it on HP's site, but here's one link for it. The zipped file contains:

HP USB disk storage format tool V2.0.6 HPUSBFW.exe (renamed hpflash1.exe)
Root directory files for booting to DOS 7 from Windows 98 SE.

The tool is a genuine HP utility and all the DOS files you'll need to make a USB flash drive bootable to MS-DOS. You can then copy the executable DOS program for PC Tools to the flash drive, boot to it and run it.

A good XP installation doesn't need the restore partition, but if you want more than one partition, you'll have to set that up after you remove your old ones. Partition Magic will do it very easily.

If you don't have Partition Magic, you can try Delpart.exe. It's a genuine Microsoft utility from NT 4 that will allow you to nuke an NTFS partition from a bootable DOS floppy. I've used it, before, and it works, but I don't know if it will with Vista's partition setup, and I don't know whether it gives you the option of deleting one of several partitions or deletes all partitions at once.

In any case, the objective is to blow off all partitions created by Vista so XP sees a completely new, unpartitioned, unformatted drive that will allow you to create a new, standard NTFS partition.

Be VERY sure you have all the drivers for the chipset and any other features on the motherboard. Find and download everything you'll need for XP, and burn it to a CD before you remove Vista. Check HP's site to look for any drivers, etc. that will work with XP. You may be able to find earlier models using the exact same motherboard that were sold with XP. If so, those drivers may work for your installation. Note the chipsets used for onboard LAN, sound, etc., and check the chip makers' sites for their chip models.

One way to find them is to check the page for the motherboard to see if they list the model or stock number. Then, go to the page where they sell replacement parts, and do a reverse lookup for the part number. It may list various models that use the same motherboard. You may also find info about the motherboard make and model by searchng for it on Google.

You should also download whatever firewall, spyware blockers and any other safety utilities you want and put them on the CD.

Then, when you install XP, do NOT activate it right away. That way, you'll be able to copy install your anti-virus and other safety programs before you ever hit the web to activate XP.

Norton Ghost or Acronis True Image will save your butt any number of ways. To avoid killing the machine, I installed XP on another drive and Ghosted it to the original drive only after I had it running. That way, I could test the installation before blowing off the original Vista installation.

Even if your current drive is SATA, you can build your installation on an old PATA drive and use Ghost to transfer it to a SATA drive once it's working. If you have two spare drives, you can Ghost your build as you get each step running. That way, if the next step fails, you can put it back to the last good point and try again. Running a good registry cleaner, such as Norton WinDoctor or Registry Mechanic, after installing each program can also help keep your build clean and solid.

Good luck. :)
 

Maximilian

Lifer
Feb 8, 2004
12,604
15
81
Buy a cheap USB pendrive and put the AHCI drivers on that. When windows xp/vista (they will both bluescreen without these drivers in my experience) asks if you want to load drivers from somewhere say yes and load up the AHCI drivers.

As an interim solution you could go into the BIOS and set the SATA mode to "ATA" rather than "AHCI". But ive been told you lose performance that way, but it should boot into windows. However i dont think you can load up the drivers and then change it back to AHCI, ive been told it has to be done during the installation stage.

I had to go through this bullshit twice on my dell vostro 1700, once when installing vista ultimate, a second time when replacing it with XP because i forgot about those drivers from the first time.