Help with a crashed PC

Discussion in 'General Hardware' started by tzamroor, Feb 20, 2005.

  1. tzamroor

    tzamroor Geek Trainee

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    Hi all

    Recently built a new machine:
    ASrock P4VT8+
    P4 Prescott 3.0Ghz (not overclocked)
    512MB generic PC3200 RAM (also not overclocked)
    Radeon A9200SE 128MB G-Card
    Onboard sound
    120GB SATA HDD

    Everything has been going fine. From time to time I used to get a bsod with a message which I could not traced on the internet. It only appeared about four times in the last 2 months and after a re-boot everything went back to normal. I have recently got two messges regarding a corrupted file which, again, disappeared with no other indication of what was about to happen. Last thursday I kissed my baby good night, turned him off and when I tried to turn him on again the next day I got a message telling me that "\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\CONFIG\SYSTEM" is missing or corrupt.

    I know this message can show up if there are hardware issues but I thought I will try and repair the Windows installation anyway. When I chose to set-up windows (booting up to the installation cd-rom) I got a bsod with "registry error" message. So now I am a bit stuck and very concerned. How will I know which bit of my hardware is failing? BIOS recognises all my components and there are no problem during POST. RAM checks OK. I know this is a realy thick question but could it be that my CPU has had it?Could the PC go through all these stages without the CPU (run fron the BIOS chip?).

    I am relly worried. It is one thing replacing a memory module. The CPU is bloody £130 quids worth.....

    Any suggestions would be greatly appriciated.

    Tzamroor
     
  2. tzamroor

    tzamroor Geek Trainee

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    Just ran Memtest and the RAM module passed with no reported errors....

    I am about to humiliate my self and cry.......

    Help.... anyone?
     
  3. Anti-Trend

    Anti-Trend Nonconformist Geek

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    What brand/type PSU do you have? A power supply which is too low wattage, doesn't have high enough amps, or supplies dirty power(!) can cause major problems and even fry your whole system. Often, strange hardware problems can be caused by a bad PSU.
     
  4. tzamroor

    tzamroor Geek Trainee

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    Hi and thanks Anti-Trend

    The PSU is a 400W P4 approved generic psu.

    Could it be that it would work fine for two months and then kill the system?

    To be honest, I would realy like to rule out the burned CPU scenario. :(

    Everything else I can replace for not so much money.....
     
  5. tzamroor

    tzamroor Geek Trainee

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    Just spoke to an engineer who suggested that memory tests are not always that definitive.
    He said HDD failure could also be the cause. Thankfully I have a spare small HDD which I am going to try. Will update with results.....
    Judging by symptoms, he did not think I am having problems with a dodgy CPU.

    Wish me luck honey, I am going in
     
  6. tzamroor

    tzamroor Geek Trainee

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    Right then - conclusions....

    No hardware issues what-so-ever- PHEWWWWWW
    Over panicked! no question about it….
    But seriously, my windows installation got so corrupt that I could not even repair or re-install.
    The only solution was to install another drive, boot to it, format the bad drive and then re-install windows on the ‘fresh’ drive.

    Works a treat! SATA rocks!

    Of course you can do the whole thing from DOS, with out installing another temporary drive, but I think it is a bit tricky with SATA drives.

    Ta to all for help and support and shoulder to bite on……

    Tzobal
     
  7. ProcalX

    ProcalX all grown up

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    If you add any more hard drives / upgrade your graphics card or add more memory you are going to need to get a more powerful PSU.

    A Generic 400W PSU has about the same power as a Good Quality 180W PSU
    good brands are:
    Antec / ThermalTake / Tagan / OCZ / Enermax

    You can get a ThermalTake 420W PSU for $35 off newegg which would be more than enough.
     

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