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chkdsk parameters?
I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a
bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne |
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#2
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chkdsk parameters?
In ,
Jo-Anne typed: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne That should do what you want quite well. FYI if you open the command prompt and enter "chkdsk /?" (without the quotes" you'll get the list of possible commands as listed below. It works the same for all DOS commands that work in XP. Many, not all, of the DOS commands will work. Several others wouldn't make sense to work on XP so they were removed. Also there are many more commands available for the Command Prompt (DOS-like) window in additioin to those but Help doesn't show them. NOTE: IIRC You'll have to do a Restart to do the chkdsk on C; it'll tell you onscreen when it's ready for restart. Chkdsk runs after the Restart. NOTE: If you enter chkdsk without any switches,, it'll do a read-only test but doesn't fix anything. /r is the better switch to use. NOTE: If you do have bad sectors, continue to minitor the drive for a few months; if more appear over time, the drive is failing - get it replaced on warranty. HTH, Twayne` ============== Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\Twaynechkdsk /? Checks a disk and displays a status report. CHKDSK [volume[[path]filename]]] [/F] [/V] [/R] [/X] [/i] [/C] [/L[:size]] volume Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name. filename FAT/FAT32 only: Specifies the files to check for fragmentation. /F Fixes errors on the disk. /V On FAT/FAT32: Displays the full path and name of every file on the disk. On NTFS: Displays cleanup messages if any. /R Locates bad sectors and recovers readable information (implies /F). /L:size NTFS only: Changes the log file size to the specified number of kilobytes. If size is not specified, displays current size. /X Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary. All opened handles to the volume would then be invalid (implies /F). /I NTFS only: Performs a less vigorous check of index entries. /C NTFS only: Skips checking of cycles within the folder structure. The /I or /C switch reduces the amount of time required to run Chkdsk by skipping certain checks of the volume. =============== |
#3
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chkdsk parameters?
"Twayne" wrote in message
... In , Jo-Anne typed: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne That should do what you want quite well. FYI if you open the command prompt and enter "chkdsk /?" (without the quotes" you'll get the list of possible commands as listed below. It works the same for all DOS commands that work in XP. Many, not all, of the DOS commands will work. Several others wouldn't make sense to work on XP so they were removed. Also there are many more commands available for the Command Prompt (DOS-like) window in additioin to those but Help doesn't show them. NOTE: IIRC You'll have to do a Restart to do the chkdsk on C; it'll tell you onscreen when it's ready for restart. Chkdsk runs after the Restart. NOTE: If you enter chkdsk without any switches,, it'll do a read-only test but doesn't fix anything. /r is the better switch to use. NOTE: If you do have bad sectors, continue to minitor the drive for a few months; if more appear over time, the drive is failing - get it replaced on warranty. HTH, Twayne` ============== Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\Twaynechkdsk /? Checks a disk and displays a status report. CHKDSK [volume[[path]filename]]] [/F] [/V] [/R] [/X] [/C] [/L[:size]] volume Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name. filename FAT/FAT32 only: Specifies the files to check for fragmentation. /F Fixes errors on the disk. /V On FAT/FAT32: Displays the full path and name of every file on the disk. On NTFS: Displays cleanup messages if any. /R Locates bad sectors and recovers readable information (implies /F). /L:size NTFS only: Changes the log file size to the specified number of kilobytes. If size is not specified, displays current size. /X Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary. All opened handles to the volume would then be invalid (implies /F). /I NTFS only: Performs a less vigorous check of index entries. /C NTFS only: Skips checking of cycles within the folder structure. The /I or /C switch reduces the amount of time required to run Chkdsk by skipping certain checks of the volume. =============== [/i] Thank you, Twayne! The problem has turned out to be much worse than I imagined. I ran CHKDSK/R--and just as it reached 95% of "CHKDSK is verifying free space (stage 5 of 5)," the computer shut itself off. It started again on its own and showed errors. Then, suddenly, my Uninterruptible Power Source started screaming as the computer turned itself off and on again. Then it did it again (with more screaming from the UPS). This time, I manually turned off the computer and unplugged it. I replugged it into a regular outlet and turned it on, and it showed that my graphics card (I think) wasn't working (NVIDIA?). It also said the audio wasn't working. At that point, I emailed myself all my new datafiles, so they'd go to my laptop, and I turned the computer off. It's been off the rest of the day. Any chance it might be the power supply (as well as hard drive bad sectors)? I had told the repair shop that the computer had been turning itself off almost every day before I brought it in. They blew out the dust with a compressor and said the computer stayed on more than 24 hours at the shop--but here I go again, only much worse. A programmer friend said they should have been running some long program on the computer to check it, not just let it sit turned on for 24 hours. Any suggestions at this point??? Thank you again! Jo-Anne |
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chkdsk parameters?
"Jo-Anne" wrote in message ... "Twayne" wrote in message ... In , Jo-Anne typed: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne That should do what you want quite well. FYI if you open the command prompt and enter "chkdsk /?" (without the quotes" you'll get the list of possible commands as listed below. It works the same for all DOS commands that work in XP. Many, not all, of the DOS commands will work. Several others wouldn't make sense to work on XP so they were removed. Also there are many more commands available for the Command Prompt (DOS-like) window in additioin to those but Help doesn't show them. NOTE: IIRC You'll have to do a Restart to do the chkdsk on C; it'll tell you onscreen when it's ready for restart. Chkdsk runs after the Restart. NOTE: If you enter chkdsk without any switches,, it'll do a read-only test but doesn't fix anything. /r is the better switch to use. NOTE: If you do have bad sectors, continue to minitor the drive for a few months; if more appear over time, the drive is failing - get it replaced on warranty. HTH, Twayne` ============== Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\Twaynechkdsk /? Checks a disk and displays a status report. CHKDSK [volume[[path]filename]]] [/F] [/V] [/R] [/X] [/C] [/L[:size]] volume Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name. filename FAT/FAT32 only: Specifies the files to check for fragmentation. /F Fixes errors on the disk. /V On FAT/FAT32: Displays the full path and name of every file on the disk. On NTFS: Displays cleanup messages if any. /R Locates bad sectors and recovers readable information (implies /F). /L:size NTFS only: Changes the log file size to the specified number of kilobytes. If size is not specified, displays current size. /X Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary. All opened handles to the volume would then be invalid (implies /F). /I NTFS only: Performs a less vigorous check of index entries. /C NTFS only: Skips checking of cycles within the folder structure. The /I or /C switch reduces the amount of time required to run Chkdsk by skipping certain checks of the volume. =============== Thank you, Twayne! The problem has turned out to be much worse than I imagined. I ran CHKDSK/R--and just as it reached 95% of "CHKDSK is verifying free space (stage 5 of 5)," the computer shut itself off. It started again on its own and showed errors. Then, suddenly, my Uninterruptible Power Source started screaming as the computer turned itself off and on again. Then it did it again (with more screaming from the UPS). This time, I manually turned off the computer and unplugged it. I replugged it into a regular outlet and turned it on, and it showed that my graphics card (I think) wasn't working (NVIDIA?). It also said the audio wasn't working. At that point, I emailed myself all my new datafiles, so they'd go to my laptop, and I turned the computer off. It's been off the rest of the day. Any chance it might be the power supply (as well as hard drive bad sectors)? I had told the repair shop that the computer had been turning itself off almost every day before I brought it in. They blew out the dust with a compressor and said the computer stayed on more than 24 hours at the shop--but here I go again, only much worse. A programmer friend said they should have been running some long program on the computer to check it, not just let it sit turned on for 24 hours. Any suggestions at this point??? Thank you again! Jo-Anne [/i] Is this the same PC that you posted about a while back saying "I may need a new one soon"? If so, I think it may be time :-( If there are no storms in the area, leave the UPS out of the loop and leave it plugged directly into the wall. How old is the UPS? They don't last forever, either, unfortunately. Try disconnecting everything that's not necessary, like printers, external drives, etc. and see what happens. It may be the power supply, but it could just as easily be the motherboard . Your friend is right; they should have been running a stress test to see if it would stay on, not just stick it in a corner and power it up. Good luck! -- SC Tom -There's no such thing as TMI when asking for tech support. |
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chkdsk parameters?
"SC Tom" wrote in message
... "Jo-Anne" wrote in message ... "Twayne" wrote in message ... In , Jo-Anne typed: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne That should do what you want quite well. FYI if you open the command prompt and enter "chkdsk /?" (without the quotes" you'll get the list of possible commands as listed below. It works the same for all DOS commands that work in XP. Many, not all, of the DOS commands will work. Several others wouldn't make sense to work on XP so they were removed. Also there are many more commands available for the Command Prompt (DOS-like) window in additioin to those but Help doesn't show them. NOTE: IIRC You'll have to do a Restart to do the chkdsk on C; it'll tell you onscreen when it's ready for restart. Chkdsk runs after the Restart. NOTE: If you enter chkdsk without any switches,, it'll do a read-only test but doesn't fix anything. /r is the better switch to use. NOTE: If you do have bad sectors, continue to minitor the drive for a few months; if more appear over time, the drive is failing - get it replaced on warranty. HTH, Twayne` ============== Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\Twaynechkdsk /? Checks a disk and displays a status report. CHKDSK [volume[[path]filename]]] [/F] [/V] [/R] [/X] [/C] [/L[:size]] volume Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name. filename FAT/FAT32 only: Specifies the files to check for fragmentation. /F Fixes errors on the disk. /V On FAT/FAT32: Displays the full path and name of every file on the disk. On NTFS: Displays cleanup messages if any. /R Locates bad sectors and recovers readable information (implies /F). /L:size NTFS only: Changes the log file size to the specified number of kilobytes. If size is not specified, displays current size. /X Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary. All opened handles to the volume would then be invalid (implies /F). /I NTFS only: Performs a less vigorous check of index entries. /C NTFS only: Skips checking of cycles within the folder structure. The /I or /C switch reduces the amount of time required to run Chkdsk by skipping certain checks of the volume. =============== Thank you, Twayne! The problem has turned out to be much worse than I imagined. I ran CHKDSK/R--and just as it reached 95% of "CHKDSK is verifying free space (stage 5 of 5)," the computer shut itself off. It started again on its own and showed errors. Then, suddenly, my Uninterruptible Power Source started screaming as the computer turned itself off and on again. Then it did it again (with more screaming from the UPS). This time, I manually turned off the computer and unplugged it. I replugged it into a regular outlet and turned it on, and it showed that my graphics card (I think) wasn't working (NVIDIA?). It also said the audio wasn't working. At that point, I emailed myself all my new datafiles, so they'd go to my laptop, and I turned the computer off. It's been off the rest of the day. Any chance it might be the power supply (as well as hard drive bad sectors)? I had told the repair shop that the computer had been turning itself off almost every day before I brought it in. They blew out the dust with a compressor and said the computer stayed on more than 24 hours at the shop--but here I go again, only much worse. A programmer friend said they should have been running some long program on the computer to check it, not just let it sit turned on for 24 hours. Any suggestions at this point??? Thank you again! Jo-Anne Is this the same PC that you posted about a while back saying "I may need a new one soon"? If so, I think it may be time :-( If there are no storms in the area, leave the UPS out of the loop and leave it plugged directly into the wall. How old is the UPS? They don't last forever, either, unfortunately. Try disconnecting everything that's not necessary, like printers, external drives, etc. and see what happens. It may be the power supply, but it could just as easily be the motherboard . Your friend is right; they should have been running a stress test to see if it would stay on, not just stick it in a corner and power it up. Good luck! -- SC Tom -There's no such thing as TMI when asking for tech support. [/i] Thank you, SC Tom! Yes, it's the same computer. I was hoping to keep it working just a little longer, but that may not be possible. If I can get it to work again plugged in to a regular outlet, I'll do what I can with it (run chkdsk etc.). The UPS is definitely old, so it too could be an issue. The screaming I heard, though, occurs, according to the manual, when there's a power overload. I'll run my own stress test--constant backups if that's all I can do--while the computer is plugged into a regular outlet and see what happens. Jo-Anne |
#6
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chkdsk parameters?
In ,
Jo-Anne typed: "SC Tom" wrote in message ... "Jo-Anne" wrote in message ... "Twayne" wrote in message ... In , Jo-Anne typed: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne That should do what you want quite well. FYI if you open the command prompt and enter "chkdsk /?" (without the quotes" you'll get the list of possible commands as listed below. It works the same for all DOS commands that work in XP. Many, not all, of the DOS commands will work. Several others wouldn't make sense to work on XP so they were removed. Also there are many more commands available for the Command Prompt (DOS-like) window in additioin to those but Help doesn't show them. NOTE: IIRC You'll have to do a Restart to do the chkdsk on C; it'll tell you onscreen when it's ready for restart. Chkdsk runs after the Restart. NOTE: If you enter chkdsk without any switches,, it'll do a read-only test but doesn't fix anything. /r is the better switch to use. NOTE: If you do have bad sectors, continue to minitor the drive for a few months; if more appear over time, the drive is failing - get it replaced on warranty. HTH, Twayne` ============== Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\Twaynechkdsk /? Checks a disk and displays a status report. CHKDSK [volume[[path]filename]]] [/F] [/V] [/R] [/X] [/C] [/L[:size]] volume Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name. filename FAT/FAT32 only: Specifies the files to check for fragmentation. /F Fixes errors on the disk. /V On FAT/FAT32: Displays the full path and name of every file on the disk. On NTFS: Displays cleanup messages if any. /R Locates bad sectors and recovers readable information (implies /F). /L:size NTFS only: Changes the log file size to the specified number of kilobytes. If size is not specified, displays current size. /X Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary. All opened handles to the volume would then be invalid (implies /F). /I NTFS only: Performs a less vigorous check of index entries. /C NTFS only: Skips checking of cycles within the folder structure. The /I or /C switch reduces the amount of time required to run Chkdsk by skipping certain checks of the volume. =============== Thank you, Twayne! The problem has turned out to be much worse than I imagined. I ran CHKDSK/R--and just as it reached 95% of "CHKDSK is verifying free space (stage 5 of 5)," the computer shut itself off. It started again on its own and showed errors. Then, suddenly, my Uninterruptible Power Source started screaming as the computer turned itself off and on again. Then it did it again (with more screaming from the UPS). This time, I manually turned off the computer and unplugged it. I replugged it into a regular outlet and turned it on, and it showed that my graphics card (I think) wasn't working (NVIDIA?). It also said the audio wasn't working. At that point, I emailed myself all my new datafiles, so they'd go to my laptop, and I turned the computer off. It's been off the rest of the day. Any chance it might be the power supply (as well as hard drive bad sectors)? I had told the repair shop that the computer had been turning itself off almost every day before I brought it in. They blew out the dust with a compressor and said the computer stayed on more than 24 hours at the shop--but here I go again, only much worse. A programmer friend said they should have been running some long program on the computer to check it, not just let it sit turned on for 24 hours. Any suggestions at this point??? Thank you again! Jo-Anne Is this the same PC that you posted about a while back saying "I may need a new one soon"? If so, I think it may be time :-( If there are no storms in the area, leave the UPS out of the loop and leave it plugged directly into the wall. How old is the UPS? They don't last forever, either, unfortunately. Try disconnecting everything that's not necessary, like printers, external drives, etc. and see what happens. It may be the power supply, but it could just as easily be the motherboard . Your friend is right; they should have been running a stress test to see if it would stay on, not just stick it in a corner and power it up. Good luck! -- SC Tom -There's no such thing as TMI when asking for tech support. Thank you, SC Tom! Yes, it's the same computer. I was hoping to keep it working just a little longer, but that may not be possible. If I can get it to work again plugged in to a regular outlet, I'll do what I can with it (run chkdsk etc.). The UPS is definitely old, so it too could be an issue. The screaming I heard, though, occurs, according to the manual, when there's a power overload. I'll run my own stress test--constant backups if that's all I can do--while the computer is plugged into a regular outlet and see what happens. Jo-Anne[/i] I agree with SC-Tom's comments. If you've been considering a new machine, this might be the time for it, unfortunately. Although, if you had overloaded your UPS, that could have been the only problem you had. I'd be interested in knowing if plugging into the wall seems to fix it. It's possible you've been teetering right on the edge of overload for some time and this hot weather is just enough to push it over the edge. Or it's just plain getting ready to quit period. And you're right, backing up is the very next thing you need to do anyway. If you're using regular backup or imaging software you should be fine but if you're doing it manually, don't forget your Address Book (*.wab), your folder called "Favorites" for your browser, things like that. HTH, Twayne` |
#7
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! chkdsk parameters?
"Twayne" wrote in message
... In , Jo-Anne typed: "SC Tom" wrote in message ... "Jo-Anne" wrote in message ... "Twayne" wrote in message ... In , Jo-Anne typed: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne That should do what you want quite well. FYI if you open the command prompt and enter "chkdsk /?" (without the quotes" you'll get the list of possible commands as listed below. It works the same for all DOS commands that work in XP. Many, not all, of the DOS commands will work. Several others wouldn't make sense to work on XP so they were removed. Also there are many more commands available for the Command Prompt (DOS-like) window in additioin to those but Help doesn't show them. NOTE: IIRC You'll have to do a Restart to do the chkdsk on C; it'll tell you onscreen when it's ready for restart. Chkdsk runs after the Restart. NOTE: If you enter chkdsk without any switches,, it'll do a read-only test but doesn't fix anything. /r is the better switch to use. NOTE: If you do have bad sectors, continue to minitor the drive for a few months; if more appear over time, the drive is failing - get it replaced on warranty. HTH, Twayne` ============== Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\Twaynechkdsk /? Checks a disk and displays a status report. CHKDSK [volume[[path]filename]]] [/F] [/V] [/R] [/X] [/C] [/L[:size]] volume Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name. filename FAT/FAT32 only: Specifies the files to check for fragmentation. /F Fixes errors on the disk. /V On FAT/FAT32: Displays the full path and name of every file on the disk. On NTFS: Displays cleanup messages if any. /R Locates bad sectors and recovers readable information (implies /F). /L:size NTFS only: Changes the log file size to the specified number of kilobytes. If size is not specified, displays current size. /X Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary. All opened handles to the volume would then be invalid (implies /F). /I NTFS only: Performs a less vigorous check of index entries. /C NTFS only: Skips checking of cycles within the folder structure. The /I or /C switch reduces the amount of time required to run Chkdsk by skipping certain checks of the volume. =============== Thank you, Twayne! The problem has turned out to be much worse than I imagined. I ran CHKDSK/R--and just as it reached 95% of "CHKDSK is verifying free space (stage 5 of 5)," the computer shut itself off. It started again on its own and showed errors. Then, suddenly, my Uninterruptible Power Source started screaming as the computer turned itself off and on again. Then it did it again (with more screaming from the UPS). This time, I manually turned off the computer and unplugged it. I replugged it into a regular outlet and turned it on, and it showed that my graphics card (I think) wasn't working (NVIDIA?). It also said the audio wasn't working. At that point, I emailed myself all my new datafiles, so they'd go to my laptop, and I turned the computer off. It's been off the rest of the day. Any chance it might be the power supply (as well as hard drive bad sectors)? I had told the repair shop that the computer had been turning itself off almost every day before I brought it in. They blew out the dust with a compressor and said the computer stayed on more than 24 hours at the shop--but here I go again, only much worse. A programmer friend said they should have been running some long program on the computer to check it, not just let it sit turned on for 24 hours. Any suggestions at this point??? Thank you again! Jo-Anne Is this the same PC that you posted about a while back saying "I may need a new one soon"? If so, I think it may be time :-( If there are no storms in the area, leave the UPS out of the loop and leave it plugged directly into the wall. How old is the UPS? They don't last forever, either, unfortunately. Try disconnecting everything that's not necessary, like printers, external drives, etc. and see what happens. It may be the power supply, but it could just as easily be the motherboard . Your friend is right; they should have been running a stress test to see if it would stay on, not just stick it in a corner and power it up. Good luck! -- SC Tom -There's no such thing as TMI when asking for tech support. Thank you, SC Tom! Yes, it's the same computer. I was hoping to keep it working just a little longer, but that may not be possible. If I can get it to work again plugged in to a regular outlet, I'll do what I can with it (run chkdsk etc.). The UPS is definitely old, so it too could be an issue. The screaming I heard, though, occurs, according to the manual, when there's a power overload. I'll run my own stress test--constant backups if that's all I can do--while the computer is plugged into a regular outlet and see what happens. Jo-Anne I agree with SC-Tom's comments. If you've been considering a new machine, this might be the time for it, unfortunately. Although, if you had overloaded your UPS, that could have been the only problem you had. I'd be interested in knowing if plugging into the wall seems to fix it. It's possible you've been teetering right on the edge of overload for some time and this hot weather is just enough to push it over the edge. Or it's just plain getting ready to quit period. And you're right, backing up is the very next thing you need to do anyway. If you're using regular backup or imaging software you should be fine but if you're doing it manually, don't forget your Address Book (*.wab), your folder called "Favorites" for your browser, things like that. HTH, Twayne` [/i] Thank you again, Twayne! Actually, I had already taken everything I needed from that computer and put it on my laptop. All I'd been doing was downloading and installing programs. If I can run chkdsk without the computer turning itself off, I'll then try to do a full backup. If that goes OK, what else can I do as a stress test for the computer? Also, when you mention teetering on the edge of overload, are you referring to the UPS or the computer? I suspect the UPS, which definitely also needs replacing. I just wish it weren't necessary to replace everything at once! Jo-Anne |
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chkdsk parameters?
On 08/29/2010 10:46 AM, Jo-Anne wrote:
I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 That does not look good I'd go to the website of your hard drive's manufacturer and get their diagnostic utility and run it. If it finds any errors I'd RMA the drive and get a new one I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne |
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! chkdsk parameters?
On 8/30/2010 12:38 PM, Jo-Anne wrote:
Thank you again, Twayne! Actually, I had already taken everything I needed from that computer and put it on my laptop. All I'd been doing was downloading and installing programs. If I can run chkdsk without the computer turning itself off, I'll then try to do a full backup. If that goes OK, what else can I do as a stress test for the computer? Also, when you mention teetering on the edge of overload, are you referring to the UPS or the computer? I suspect the UPS, which definitely also needs replacing. I just wish it weren't necessary to replace everything at once! Jo-Anne Well, if you already have all of your data safely on your new laptop, I don't know what else is left for you do with that hard drive? But if you still need anything off of it, you can possibly just buy an USB hard drive enclosure, put the PC's hard drive into it, and then plug the enclosure into your laptop via an USB port. You can run chkdsk to your heart's content that way. You could even run the GUI version of chkdsk, since it won't be the system disk on the laptop. As for what you can run to stress test your old PC, you can download a copy of Ubuntu Linux Live CD. They have an option on it called "Memtest86+" on it that tests the memory of any machine, and you can run it for hours or days if you like. Yousuf Khan |
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! chkdsk parameters?
"Yousuf Khan" wrote in message
... On 8/30/2010 12:38 PM, Jo-Anne wrote: Thank you again, Twayne! Actually, I had already taken everything I needed from that computer and put it on my laptop. All I'd been doing was downloading and installing programs. If I can run chkdsk without the computer turning itself off, I'll then try to do a full backup. If that goes OK, what else can I do as a stress test for the computer? Also, when you mention teetering on the edge of overload, are you referring to the UPS or the computer? I suspect the UPS, which definitely also needs replacing. I just wish it weren't necessary to replace everything at once! Jo-Anne Well, if you already have all of your data safely on your new laptop, I don't know what else is left for you do with that hard drive? But if you still need anything off of it, you can possibly just buy an USB hard drive enclosure, put the PC's hard drive into it, and then plug the enclosure into your laptop via an USB port. You can run chkdsk to your heart's content that way. You could even run the GUI version of chkdsk, since it won't be the system disk on the laptop. As for what you can run to stress test your old PC, you can download a copy of Ubuntu Linux Live CD. They have an option on it called "Memtest86+" on it that tests the memory of any machine, and you can run it for hours or days if you like. Yousuf Khan Thank you, Yousuf Khan! The problem is that the computer I'm having trouble with is my main computer, used for business. I put everything on the laptop when it began to go bad, so I could work from the laptop if necessary. I'll check out Memtest86+. Thank you again! Jo-Anne |
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chkdsk parameters?
"philo" wrote in message
... On 08/29/2010 10:46 AM, Jo-Anne wrote: I just had a new hard drive installed on my WinXP computer. I installed a bunch of programs and datafiles and then tried to back up with Acronis True Image. It stopped at around 45% with an error message of E000101F4: Failed to read data from the sector 88,109,519 of the hard disk 1 That does not look good I'd go to the website of your hard drive's manufacturer and get their diagnostic utility and run it. If it finds any errors I'd RMA the drive and get a new one I'm guessing that there are bad sectors on this new drive. Would running CHKDSK C:/r be the right way to go at this point? Are there any other parameters I should include (especially so I can get a report on where the problems were)? Thank you! Jo-Anne Thank you, Philo! I hadn't thought to run the manufacturer's diagnostic utility, but I'll look for it right away. Jo-Anne |
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