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#1
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Hi,
I recently moved a short distance, and in the process I suppose my PC was left in a box in a hot garage for a few hours before being jostled into my car and shipped about 20 miles... Long story short something must have gotten knocked loose because I hooked it up and ran it at my new place, and when Windows starts to load I get the blue screen and this message: "Error: A problem has been detected and Windows has been shut down to prevent damage to your computer. UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME If this is the first time you've seen this stop error screen, restart your computer. If this screen appears again, follow these steps: Check to make sure any new hardware or software is properly installed. If this is a new installation, ask your hardware or software manufacturer for any Windows updates you might need. If problems continue, disable or remove any newly installed hardware or software. Disable Bios memory options such as caching or shadowing. If you need to use Safe Mode to remove or disable components, restart your computer, press F8 to select Advanced startup options, and then select Safe Mode. Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D |
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#2
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 -- JS http://www.pagestart.com |
#3
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
As the message said, if it happened again ... : Did it happen again? Or
ws it OK after that? "JS" @ wrote in message snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 |
#4
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
No, I get the blue-screen every time I restart.
I have also not installed any new hardware or software for several months, sans the occasional game or desktop utility. D "Twayne" wrote: As the message said, if it happened again ... : Did it happen again? Or ws it OK after that? "JS" @ wrote in message snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 |
#5
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
"Damon" wrote in message
No, I get the blue-screen every time I restart. I have also not installed any new hardware or software for several months, sans the occasional game or desktop utility. D I'm coming into this late, so if I'm just repeating other's suggestions, feel free to say so. Games are very capable of causing almost every sort of problem a computer can experience, especially poorly written games. Desktop utilities, well, if they're oddballs, can do a lot of the same things. I assume you can't get into Safe Mode then? Seems like you said you get the same error? Have you tried uninstalling the "occasional game or desktop utility" to see if it changes anything. Oh, you can't boot; never mind! Do you know how, and do you have, the Recovery Console installed? Boot from the system CD and see if you can use the Recovery Console to look around. If it's new to you, you'll need to read up a bit on it first or it'll just look like a standard DOS window to you. It is NOT! You can run chkdsk for instance from the RC (recovery console) and various other handy utilities not otherwise available. Chkdsk /r or /p are good ones to try. Have you tried a Repair Install? Back up first! It's non-destructive to data, but ... those are famous last words! Then again, there's always the full reinstall of everything. I keep good backups and normally once I've reached an excessive time limit trouble-shooting I resort to re-imaging my drive (Restoring from backup). Unless I'm looking for the education, I usually consider the fastest route to getting things working again. At least with a rebuild, you know two days plus a few weeks of occasionally realizing what you forgot, gets you going again if you don't have backups. If you don't have backups, consider that all the work you're doing could probably be automated and accomplished in about 20 minutes by re-imaging the drive. A good backup strategy can be worth its bytes in gold. HTH, Twayne` "Twayne" wrote: As the message said, if it happened again ... : Did it happen again? Or ws it OK after that? "JS" @ wrote in message snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 |
#6
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Besides some minor ones from the 90s the only games I have installed are C&C:
Kane's Wrath and Defcon, two completely legitimate programs that have never given me any trouble. As far as desktop utilities, we're talking standard stuff like CCleaner, Adaware, AVG, Driver Detective, ArtRage, etc. I only see two distinct possibilities he One, that something physically happened to the tower during transport, which would really really suck. Or two, which is that the last person to use my PC was my visiting mother, who has never touched my computer in her life. When she came over I opened up her account on MSN, which I've also never done before (I only use mine) and she had to wait while the computer downloaded several dozen megabytes of her personal e-mail and settings, information that has never been on my computer before and very possibly contained a virus or something (she knows nothing about computers). I grilled her over the phone last night but she doesn't remember doing anything strange, but she also doesn't remember if she shut the thing down correctly, which is a bad sign. So I learned my lesson on that account. I've had this PC since 2005 and have never reformatted it or bothered to back it up; It still runs great and I never felt like undertaking the hassle. I back up my most important stuff on a flash-drive once in a while but that's the extent of my paranoia. To answer your first question, yes, I tried running Windows in Safe Mode with the same result. But you've provided some interesting potential solutions that I'll try when I get home from work... if I can even find my "system CD" (I assume you mean the Windows XP disc that came with the computer.) Assuming I ever even got one when I bought the thing in the first place, it is buried deep inside a moving box somewhere. Egh. Thanks and I'll get back to you, D "Twayne" wrote: "Damon" wrote in message No, I get the blue-screen every time I restart. I have also not installed any new hardware or software for several months, sans the occasional game or desktop utility. D I'm coming into this late, so if I'm just repeating other's suggestions, feel free to say so. Games are very capable of causing almost every sort of problem a computer can experience, especially poorly written games. Desktop utilities, well, if they're oddballs, can do a lot of the same things. I assume you can't get into Safe Mode then? Seems like you said you get the same error? Have you tried uninstalling the "occasional game or desktop utility" to see if it changes anything. Oh, you can't boot; never mind! Do you know how, and do you have, the Recovery Console installed? Boot from the system CD and see if you can use the Recovery Console to look around. If it's new to you, you'll need to read up a bit on it first or it'll just look like a standard DOS window to you. It is NOT! You can run chkdsk for instance from the RC (recovery console) and various other handy utilities not otherwise available. Chkdsk /r or /p are good ones to try. Have you tried a Repair Install? Back up first! It's non-destructive to data, but ... those are famous last words! Then again, there's always the full reinstall of everything. I keep good backups and normally once I've reached an excessive time limit trouble-shooting I resort to re-imaging my drive (Restoring from backup). Unless I'm looking for the education, I usually consider the fastest route to getting things working again. At least with a rebuild, you know two days plus a few weeks of occasionally realizing what you forgot, gets you going again if you don't have backups. If you don't have backups, consider that all the work you're doing could probably be automated and accomplished in about 20 minutes by re-imaging the drive. A good backup strategy can be worth its bytes in gold. HTH, Twayne` "Twayne" wrote: As the message said, if it happened again ... : Did it happen again? Or ws it OK after that? "JS" @ wrote in message snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 |
#7
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Damon
Does the BIOS recognise the hard drive? Given your explanation of events I would check the cabling from motherboard to drive. Also use an Air Duster to remove dust within the computer casing. http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...n/sm/index.htm One can never be certain but this is not a driver issue. The references to games causing the problem are a "red herring". Unmountable Boot Volume http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555302 Background information on Stop error code http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms797142.aspx 0x000000ED: UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME The kernel mode I/O subsystem attempted to mount the boot volume and it failed. This error also might occur during an upgrade to Win XP on systems that use higher throughput ATA disks or controllers with incorrect cabling. In some cases, your system might appear to work normally after you restart. Source: http://aumha.org/a/stop.htm Description of the Windows XP Recovery Console http://support.microsoft.com/default...;en-us;Q314058 Try booting with all hardware peripherals, except keyboard, mouse. and monitor, disconnected. If you have important data files to be recovered you need to do this before trying to fix the computer! Do you? -- Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Damon wrote: Besides some minor ones from the 90s the only games I have installed are C&C: Kane's Wrath and Defcon, two completely legitimate programs that have never given me any trouble. As far as desktop utilities, we're talking standard stuff like CCleaner, Adaware, AVG, Driver Detective, ArtRage, etc. I only see two distinct possibilities he One, that something physically happened to the tower during transport, which would really really suck. Or two, which is that the last person to use my PC was my visiting mother, who has never touched my computer in her life. When she came over I opened up her account on MSN, which I've also never done before (I only use mine) and she had to wait while the computer downloaded several dozen megabytes of her personal e-mail and settings, information that has never been on my computer before and very possibly contained a virus or something (she knows nothing about computers). I grilled her over the phone last night but she doesn't remember doing anything strange, but she also doesn't remember if she shut the thing down correctly, which is a bad sign. So I learned my lesson on that account. I've had this PC since 2005 and have never reformatted it or bothered to back it up; It still runs great and I never felt like undertaking the hassle. I back up my most important stuff on a flash-drive once in a while but that's the extent of my paranoia. To answer your first question, yes, I tried running Windows in Safe Mode with the same result. But you've provided some interesting potential solutions that I'll try when I get home from work... if I can even find my "system CD" (I assume you mean the Windows XP disc that came with the computer.) Assuming I ever even got one when I bought the thing in the first place, it is buried deep inside a moving box somewhere. Egh. Thanks and I'll get back to you, D "Twayne" wrote: "Damon" wrote in message No, I get the blue-screen every time I restart. I have also not installed any new hardware or software for several months, sans the occasional game or desktop utility. D I'm coming into this late, so if I'm just repeating other's suggestions, feel free to say so. Games are very capable of causing almost every sort of problem a computer can experience, especially poorly written games. Desktop utilities, well, if they're oddballs, can do a lot of the same things. I assume you can't get into Safe Mode then? Seems like you said you get the same error? Have you tried uninstalling the "occasional game or desktop utility" to see if it changes anything. Oh, you can't boot; never mind! Do you know how, and do you have, the Recovery Console installed? Boot from the system CD and see if you can use the Recovery Console to look around. If it's new to you, you'll need to read up a bit on it first or it'll just look like a standard DOS window to you. It is NOT! You can run chkdsk for instance from the RC (recovery console) and various other handy utilities not otherwise available. Chkdsk /r or /p are good ones to try. Have you tried a Repair Install? Back up first! It's non-destructive to data, but ... those are famous last words! Then again, there's always the full reinstall of everything. I keep good backups and normally once I've reached an excessive time limit trouble-shooting I resort to re-imaging my drive (Restoring from backup). Unless I'm looking for the education, I usually consider the fastest route to getting things working again. At least with a rebuild, you know two days plus a few weeks of occasionally realizing what you forgot, gets you going again if you don't have backups. If you don't have backups, consider that all the work you're doing could probably be automated and accomplished in about 20 minutes by re-imaging the drive. A good backup strategy can be worth its bytes in gold. HTH, Twayne` "Twayne" wrote: As the message said, if it happened again ... : Did it happen again? Or ws it OK after that? "JS" @ wrote in message snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 |
#8
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to
have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. I also did a thorough check of the inside of the case (with air-duster) and nothing looks undone. Oh well. Thanks any way guys. D "Gerry" wrote: Damon Does the BIOS recognise the hard drive? Given your explanation of events I would check the cabling from motherboard to drive. Also use an Air Duster to remove dust within the computer casing. http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...n/sm/index.htm One can never be certain but this is not a driver issue. The references to games causing the problem are a "red herring". Unmountable Boot Volume http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555302 Background information on Stop error code http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms797142.aspx 0x000000ED: UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME The kernel mode I/O subsystem attempted to mount the boot volume and it failed. This error also might occur during an upgrade to Win XP on systems that use higher throughput ATA disks or controllers with incorrect cabling. In some cases, your system might appear to work normally after you restart. Source: http://aumha.org/a/stop.htm Description of the Windows XP Recovery Console http://support.microsoft.com/default...;en-us;Q314058 Try booting with all hardware peripherals, except keyboard, mouse. and monitor, disconnected. If you have important data files to be recovered you need to do this before trying to fix the computer! Do you? -- Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Damon wrote: Besides some minor ones from the 90s the only games I have installed are C&C: Kane's Wrath and Defcon, two completely legitimate programs that have never given me any trouble. As far as desktop utilities, we're talking standard stuff like CCleaner, Adaware, AVG, Driver Detective, ArtRage, etc. I only see two distinct possibilities he One, that something physically happened to the tower during transport, which would really really suck. Or two, which is that the last person to use my PC was my visiting mother, who has never touched my computer in her life. When she came over I opened up her account on MSN, which I've also never done before (I only use mine) and she had to wait while the computer downloaded several dozen megabytes of her personal e-mail and settings, information that has never been on my computer before and very possibly contained a virus or something (she knows nothing about computers). I grilled her over the phone last night but she doesn't remember doing anything strange, but she also doesn't remember if she shut the thing down correctly, which is a bad sign. So I learned my lesson on that account. I've had this PC since 2005 and have never reformatted it or bothered to back it up; It still runs great and I never felt like undertaking the hassle. I back up my most important stuff on a flash-drive once in a while but that's the extent of my paranoia. To answer your first question, yes, I tried running Windows in Safe Mode with the same result. But you've provided some interesting potential solutions that I'll try when I get home from work... if I can even find my "system CD" (I assume you mean the Windows XP disc that came with the computer.) Assuming I ever even got one when I bought the thing in the first place, it is buried deep inside a moving box somewhere. Egh. Thanks and I'll get back to you, D "Twayne" wrote: "Damon" wrote in message No, I get the blue-screen every time I restart. I have also not installed any new hardware or software for several months, sans the occasional game or desktop utility. D I'm coming into this late, so if I'm just repeating other's suggestions, feel free to say so. Games are very capable of causing almost every sort of problem a computer can experience, especially poorly written games. Desktop utilities, well, if they're oddballs, can do a lot of the same things. I assume you can't get into Safe Mode then? Seems like you said you get the same error? Have you tried uninstalling the "occasional game or desktop utility" to see if it changes anything. Oh, you can't boot; never mind! Do you know how, and do you have, the Recovery Console installed? Boot from the system CD and see if you can use the Recovery Console to look around. If it's new to you, you'll need to read up a bit on it first or it'll just look like a standard DOS window to you. It is NOT! You can run chkdsk for instance from the RC (recovery console) and various other handy utilities not otherwise available. Chkdsk /r or /p are good ones to try. Have you tried a Repair Install? Back up first! It's non-destructive to data, but ... those are famous last words! Then again, there's always the full reinstall of everything. I keep good backups and normally once I've reached an excessive time limit trouble-shooting I resort to re-imaging my drive (Restoring from backup). Unless I'm looking for the education, I usually consider the fastest route to getting things working again. At least with a rebuild, you know two days plus a few weeks of occasionally realizing what you forgot, gets you going again if you don't have backups. If you don't have backups, consider that all the work you're doing could probably be automated and accomplished in about 20 minutes by re-imaging the drive. A good backup strategy can be worth its bytes in gold. HTH, Twayne` "Twayne" wrote: As the message said, if it happened again ... : Did it happen again? Or ws it OK after that? "JS" @ wrote in message snipped Technical Information: ***STOP: 0X000000ED (0X8A944900, 0X0000006, 0X00000000, 0X00000000)" I'm not sure what any of that means but I do recall a similar issue occurring several years ago, this PC has always been a bit temperamental on startup. I ran F2 Setup and flicked a few settings on and off but nothing helped. I also cracked the thing open and did a visual inspection but there was nothing obvious... Any ideas? My specs: Dell Dimension E510 Pentium 4 3.0 ghz 2.5 gb sdram Windows XP (media center edition) SP3 Geforce 8800 GT 40gig hard-drive etc. I know my way around a computer alright so I am willing to post new information as needed. Thanks! D When you restart your computer or upgrade to Windows XP, you receive the "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message http://support.microsoft.com/kb/297185 |
#9
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Damon wrote:
Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
#10
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
It's still worth a try as I found one Dell CD
that worked fine on two different models. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Bennett Marco" wrote in message news Damon wrote: Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
#11
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
My friend dug out an old XP CD for me to use so at the very least I can
reformat I guess. D "JS" wrote: It's still worth a try as I found one Dell CD that worked fine on two different models. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Bennett Marco" wrote in message news Damon wrote: Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
#12
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Alright, my friend lent me a Windows XP Pro CD (mine is Media Center Edition
but whatever) and I ran the chkdsk /r and /p function from the F2 Repair Console and the Recovery Console, after a few minutes of dicking around the computer restarted and now it won't even load to the Windows logo, now I get the DELL logo with the little loading bar and then the monitor reboots and a message flashes quickly on the screen, something about "invalid this" and "reading from" that... Then I get the DELL logo again and so on and so forth into eternity. So I went into the Windows installation tool to just do an overwrite install of XP Pro and it said the data on the selected drive (and the only drive, C:/ but apparently unidentifiable) is too damaged to do an augmented install, that it will have to do a full reformat, okay, so I tell it to format and I try both the "quick" option and the regular option, both times on the blue screen when the yellow bar gets to the end and it says "setting up files for install" afterward the computer restarts and I just get the DELL logo over and over and over again like before. So now my computer is even more screwed. Great. Any ideas or is it time to invest in a custom built rig? D "Damon" wrote: My friend dug out an old XP CD for me to use so at the very least I can reformat I guess. D "JS" wrote: It's still worth a try as I found one Dell CD that worked fine on two different models. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Bennett Marco" wrote in message news Damon wrote: Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
#13
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Yes,
If the Dell BIOS has an option to disable automatic reboot on error then do so. You might get a better look at the error message. If that doesn't work then try another hard drive. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Damon" wrote in message ... Alright, my friend lent me a Windows XP Pro CD (mine is Media Center Edition but whatever) and I ran the chkdsk /r and /p function from the F2 Repair Console and the Recovery Console, after a few minutes of dicking around the computer restarted and now it won't even load to the Windows logo, now I get the DELL logo with the little loading bar and then the monitor reboots and a message flashes quickly on the screen, something about "invalid this" and "reading from" that... Then I get the DELL logo again and so on and so forth into eternity. So I went into the Windows installation tool to just do an overwrite install of XP Pro and it said the data on the selected drive (and the only drive, C:/ but apparently unidentifiable) is too damaged to do an augmented install, that it will have to do a full reformat, okay, so I tell it to format and I try both the "quick" option and the regular option, both times on the blue screen when the yellow bar gets to the end and it says "setting up files for install" afterward the computer restarts and I just get the DELL logo over and over and over again like before. So now my computer is even more screwed. Great. Any ideas or is it time to invest in a custom built rig? D "Damon" wrote: My friend dug out an old XP CD for me to use so at the very least I can reformat I guess. D "JS" wrote: It's still worth a try as I found one Dell CD that worked fine on two different models. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Bennett Marco" wrote in message news Damon wrote: Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
#14
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
Alright, bought a new hard-drive (WD CAVIAR SE 160GM SATA HD 7200RPM 8MB
3.5LP 3YR), installed hardware, installed WinXP Pro, and that's all well and good... ....but I can't seem to connect to the internet to proceed with updating/bringing it up to standard. Our ISP is Comcast Broadband, and I've used it successfully on the same computer in the past. It's always on and we reset the network several times, but no matter what when I hook the network cable up to my computer, and it lights up, nothing happens in Windows. Nothing pops up telling me "new connection detected" or anything. "New Connection Wizard" is useless; it tells me no network or even network hardware can be detected. Which is odd, because I have used our Comcast network flawlessly on my computer in the past (before the new HD and OS); nothing shows up in the Connection Settings window. Yes, everything is plugged in where it is supposed to be. Any ideas? I know this seems off topic at this point but now that I have a new HD that problem is more or less solved, and if I can get online then I can easily take it from here. Thanks, D "JS" wrote: Yes, If the Dell BIOS has an option to disable automatic reboot on error then do so. You might get a better look at the error message. If that doesn't work then try another hard drive. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Damon" wrote in message ... Alright, my friend lent me a Windows XP Pro CD (mine is Media Center Edition but whatever) and I ran the chkdsk /r and /p function from the F2 Repair Console and the Recovery Console, after a few minutes of dicking around the computer restarted and now it won't even load to the Windows logo, now I get the DELL logo with the little loading bar and then the monitor reboots and a message flashes quickly on the screen, something about "invalid this" and "reading from" that... Then I get the DELL logo again and so on and so forth into eternity. So I went into the Windows installation tool to just do an overwrite install of XP Pro and it said the data on the selected drive (and the only drive, C:/ but apparently unidentifiable) is too damaged to do an augmented install, that it will have to do a full reformat, okay, so I tell it to format and I try both the "quick" option and the regular option, both times on the blue screen when the yellow bar gets to the end and it says "setting up files for install" afterward the computer restarts and I just get the DELL logo over and over and over again like before. So now my computer is even more screwed. Great. Any ideas or is it time to invest in a custom built rig? D "Damon" wrote: My friend dug out an old XP CD for me to use so at the very least I can reformat I guess. D "JS" wrote: It's still worth a try as I found one Dell CD that worked fine on two different models. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Bennett Marco" wrote in message news Damon wrote: Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
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Unmountable Boot Volume?
When you installed XP you most likely did a "Clean Install".
If yes then you need to install the motherboard chipset and other device drivers, one of which will be for your network adaptor. Use 'Device Manager' to look for any yellow question marks Since you need to get above mentioned drivers, ask your friend to download the XP drivers (and there will be a number of them) from Dell's web site for your specific make and model. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Damon" wrote in message ... Alright, bought a new hard-drive (WD CAVIAR SE 160GM SATA HD 7200RPM 8MB 3.5LP 3YR), installed hardware, installed WinXP Pro, and that's all well and good... ...but I can't seem to connect to the internet to proceed with updating/bringing it up to standard. Our ISP is Comcast Broadband, and I've used it successfully on the same computer in the past. It's always on and we reset the network several times, but no matter what when I hook the network cable up to my computer, and it lights up, nothing happens in Windows. Nothing pops up telling me "new connection detected" or anything. "New Connection Wizard" is useless; it tells me no network or even network hardware can be detected. Which is odd, because I have used our Comcast network flawlessly on my computer in the past (before the new HD and OS); nothing shows up in the Connection Settings window. Yes, everything is plugged in where it is supposed to be. Any ideas? I know this seems off topic at this point but now that I have a new HD that problem is more or less solved, and if I can get online then I can easily take it from here. Thanks, D "JS" wrote: Yes, If the Dell BIOS has an option to disable automatic reboot on error then do so. You might get a better look at the error message. If that doesn't work then try another hard drive. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Damon" wrote in message ... Alright, my friend lent me a Windows XP Pro CD (mine is Media Center Edition but whatever) and I ran the chkdsk /r and /p function from the F2 Repair Console and the Recovery Console, after a few minutes of dicking around the computer restarted and now it won't even load to the Windows logo, now I get the DELL logo with the little loading bar and then the monitor reboots and a message flashes quickly on the screen, something about "invalid this" and "reading from" that... Then I get the DELL logo again and so on and so forth into eternity. So I went into the Windows installation tool to just do an overwrite install of XP Pro and it said the data on the selected drive (and the only drive, C:/ but apparently unidentifiable) is too damaged to do an augmented install, that it will have to do a full reformat, okay, so I tell it to format and I try both the "quick" option and the regular option, both times on the blue screen when the yellow bar gets to the end and it says "setting up files for install" afterward the computer restarts and I just get the DELL logo over and over and over again like before. So now my computer is even more screwed. Great. Any ideas or is it time to invest in a custom built rig? D "Damon" wrote: My friend dug out an old XP CD for me to use so at the very least I can reformat I guess. D "JS" wrote: It's still worth a try as I found one Dell CD that worked fine on two different models. -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Bennett Marco" wrote in message news Damon wrote: Well, I can't find either my XP CD or my Dell Utilities CD... I'm going to have my mom send hers up from San Diego but otherwise it looks like I'm screwed. If she doesn't have the EXACT same computer you're DEFINITELY screwed. |
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