View Full Version : Reboot takes 15 minutes
James Brown
December 11th 03, 07:44 AM
I have just built a new PC - P4 2.4Ghz, 1GB PC3200 RAM, ASUS P4S800 mobo,
etc etc
If the PC has been turned off for a few hours the PC starts up very quickly
and I am using Windows apps within 2 minutes - maybe quicker.
However, if I reboot, it takes 15 minutes to start up again. This time is
usually spent displaying the XP logo. During this 15 minutes, the HDD light
on my case is constantly on. This also happens in Safe Mode. Because of
this hanging effect, some services timeout and fail to startup.
Please help, I've tried everything including:
msconfig and disabling all services and startup programs etc
bootvis.exe - which won't work - something about no disk device.
checking DMA on hard disks
unplugging various hardware before start up
full virus scans with the latest definitions
installed latest drivers
defragged disks
My current thought is it's a heat problem but is that really a possibility?
Are there any bios settings that could cause this delay on a 2nd boot up?
December 11th 03, 07:44 AM
It sounds like you are hung up on some setting (duh).
Try a safe mode reboot and let it boot line by line to
see where it hangs.
Personally, I would immedately blame your virus scanning
software. My first install of Norton did that to me.
Harry Ohrn
December 11th 03, 07:45 AM
What is your powersupply rated at? People sometimes skimp on the psu when
building a system.
--
Harry Ohrn MS-MVP [Shell\User]
www.webtree.ca/windowsxp
"James Brown" > wrote in message
...
> I have just built a new PC - P4 2.4Ghz, 1GB PC3200 RAM, ASUS P4S800 mobo,
> etc etc
>
> If the PC has been turned off for a few hours the PC starts up very
quickly
> and I am using Windows apps within 2 minutes - maybe quicker.
>
> However, if I reboot, it takes 15 minutes to start up again. This time is
> usually spent displaying the XP logo. During this 15 minutes, the HDD
light
> on my case is constantly on. This also happens in Safe Mode. Because of
> this hanging effect, some services timeout and fail to startup.
>
> Please help, I've tried everything including:
> msconfig and disabling all services and startup programs etc
> bootvis.exe - which won't work - something about no disk device.
> checking DMA on hard disks
> unplugging various hardware before start up
> full virus scans with the latest definitions
> installed latest drivers
> defragged disks
>
> My current thought is it's a heat problem but is that really a
possibility?
>
> Are there any bios settings that could cause this delay on a 2nd boot up?
>
>
>
>
>
>
Ron Martell
December 11th 03, 07:45 AM
"James Brown" > wrote:
>I have just built a new PC - P4 2.4Ghz, 1GB PC3200 RAM, ASUS P4S800 mobo,
>etc etc
>
>If the PC has been turned off for a few hours the PC starts up very quickly
>and I am using Windows apps within 2 minutes - maybe quicker.
>
>However, if I reboot, it takes 15 minutes to start up again. This time is
>usually spent displaying the XP logo. During this 15 minutes, the HDD light
>on my case is constantly on. This also happens in Safe Mode. Because of
>this hanging effect, some services timeout and fail to startup.
>
>Please help, I've tried everything including:
>msconfig and disabling all services and startup programs etc
>bootvis.exe - which won't work - something about no disk device.
>checking DMA on hard disks
>unplugging various hardware before start up
>full virus scans with the latest definitions
>installed latest drivers
>defragged disks
>
>My current thought is it's a heat problem but is that really a possibility?
>
>Are there any bios settings that could cause this delay on a 2nd boot up?
>
I think you are right to suspect a possible heat related problem.
Try this for an experiment.
Turn the computer on and go directly into the BIOS setup.
Leave it there and go for a long leisurely lunch (as in 2 or 3 hours).
Then exit BIOS setup and let the machine boot up.
If that bootup takes 15 minutes then overheating is the prime suspect.
Check for any temperature and voltage monitoring function for your
motherboard, either in the System BIOS or as a separate utility that
you can run at startup. Make sure that it is set to track everything
and that audible alarms are active for any abnormal values. That may
help to discover the cause of the problem.
Good luck
Ron Martell Duncan B.C. Canada
--
Microsoft MVP
On-Line Help Computer Service
http://onlinehelp.bc.ca
"The reason computer chips are so small is computers don't eat much."
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