Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Just bought a new mobo, cpu and some new memory. Im using my existing HDD, graphics card and case.
Ive built computers before so its not as if I have no clue about what Im doing, howerver I have a problem
Put everything together and started it up. Went into the bios to sort the settings out and everything went fine. But when it goes past the bios screen to where it normall starts to load windows it just reboots itself
Ive tried some older memory to see if it was faulty but it did exactly the same thing. The memory works fine in another machine. I changed the IDE cables and still the same problem.
Ive tried using a different HDD and it does the same thing. None of the HDD's are blank however. Would this be an issue?
The things left to try are;
1)CPU
2)Mobo
3)power supply.
Can anyone suggest anything to try? If not Im going to have to swap the above parts with another computer to test.
Thanks Mark
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
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Disconnect the hard drive and see if you can get as far as getting a boot error as there's no system disc. Also try booting to a floppy.
My first thoughts are power - is the psu sufficiently well rated?
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Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Ive tried a new psu now. It does exactly the same. It is a budget one for about fifteen quid but it said it was 600w and while I know budget ones wont give me that much Im sure it will be enough to power an AMD Sempron 2400+?
When I disconnect the HDD it gets to a screen which says reboot and select proper boot device.
Ive now tried a working CPU with no success
Ive even tried the new CPU in another computer and it runs fine.
I dont have a FDD to boot from
[Edited on 14-01-2006 by Melville]
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Bart
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Registered: 19th Aug 02
Location: Midsomer Norton, Bristol Avon
User status: Offline
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try pushing f6 (?) to boot into safe mode, see if that has an effect?
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Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Tied it, just does exactly the same.
This was one of my first thoughts as the HDD will contain the old mobo drivers and I thought that might be the problem.
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Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Ok I believe I have found the problem.
I formatted an old drive and put that on and it works. Perhaps I was right in my inital diagnosis that there was in fact a mother board driver conflict?
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
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Yeah, or something related to boot up that was causing it. Windows will reboot automatically if something terribly bad happens.
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John
Member
Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
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Thats a really stupid feature to enable by default.
If you happen to be able to get into windows turn off 'automatically restart on error'.
Would be handy if it let you see what the error was before restarting.
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
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You get a core dump don't you?
If its so bad, really there's not much worth looking in to.
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Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Is there anyway I can remove the drivers from the HDD to avoid formatting the HDD and losing everything?
I have the files backed up but its the programs that will be a bithch!!
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
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I doubt it can be isolated to one thing. Its pretty bad if it can't even boot. Normally you would get a boot up with errors.
You need not format the drive, you can install along side old stuff. Personally I would be taking the opportunity to get a new drive as well which is a bit of cautionary purchase but it means you'll get more life out of the computer before it fails again.
[Edited on 14-01-2006 by Ian]
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Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Ive just bought a new one after the old one went tits up
Perhaps it is time to look at some sort of raid setup?
Is it possible to set up raid so that if one drive fails the other one will be ready to go type of thing. Like I said above I have the files backed up but the programs take ages to install.
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Melville
Member
Registered: 4th Jun 03
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
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Forgot to add that my mobo supports S-ata raid 0 and 1
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Ian
Site Administrator
Registered: 28th Aug 99
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
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Worth looking at. I was only meaning that if the hardware was old. Can you not get the drive in another computer, get your stuff off, then format it and do a fresh install? Doing an install with data already present is not ideal.
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