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frequent freezes, nothing helps
I have a three year old comp which gave me problems from day one. Initially it had trouble playing DVD's (random reset once or twice during play), but after installing Win2000 the problems went away. I still sometimes got a random freeze, but it happend once a month or so, so I dismissed it as random windows-quirks. This year I installed WinXP and the problems reappeared again. First I noticed that Word didn't work right (well that's an understatement - I opened word and it froze few minutes later so I had to do a hardware reset every time). Games stopped working (also a random freeze, sometimes after 5 minutes, sometimes after an hour) and playing a DVD means just begging for a reset. Now what I tried: - scanned for viruses/spyware - formatting hard disk/reinstalling system - installing service packs - changing drivers for video card/sound card/Via4in1 - putting different RAM, different video card, different hard-disk I reinstalled windows 2000 thinking it's aWinXP-MoBo incompatibility, but to my horror the problems stayed. Event log shows sqaut - no problems at all. Now I have simply run out of choices. Can somebody please tell me what might be the cause of this crap and what is the best way to diagnose it? If it's a heating problem, what's the best way to be sure (I am not into throwing money buying more components if I am not sure it would fix the problem)? Btw all the fans work correctly and opening the case helps nothing. Would BIOS tinkering be helpful - which settings could cause this? Any kind of assistance is much appreciated. Thanks. Cheers! P.S. My specs are: Iwill KK266 MoBo/CMI8838 soundcard AMD Athlon 1400 512 MB RAM Radeon 9600Pro P.P.S. I have tried flashing the BIOS, but the official installation on IWill's website is corrupted - also, it's from 2002 so I doubt it would help much even if it was correct.
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"horseface" <horsef***@yahoo.com> wrote in message Test the memory with memtest86.news:d09g2s$pm1$1@bagan.srce.hr... > Hi everybody. > > I have a three year old comp which gave me problems from day > one. Initially > it had trouble playing DVD's (random reset once or twice during > play), but > after installing Win2000 the problems went away. I still > sometimes got a > random freeze, but it happend once a month or so, so I dismissed > it as > random windows-quirks. > > This year I installed WinXP and the problems reappeared again. > First I > noticed that Word didn't work right (well that's an > understatement - I > opened word and it froze few minutes later so I had to do a > hardware reset > every time). Games stopped working (also a random freeze, > sometimes after 5 > minutes, sometimes after an hour) and playing a DVD means just > begging for a > reset. > > Now what I tried: > - scanned for viruses/spyware > - formatting hard disk/reinstalling system > - installing service packs > - changing drivers for video card/sound card/Via4in1 > - putting different RAM, different video card, different > hard-disk > > I reinstalled windows 2000 thinking it's aWinXP-MoBo > incompatibility, but to > my horror the problems stayed. Event log shows sqaut - no > problems at all. > > Now I have simply run out of choices. Can somebody please tell > me what might > be the cause of this crap and what is the best way to diagnose > it? If it's a > heating problem, what's the best way to be sure (I am not into > throwing > money buying more components if I am not sure it would fix the > problem)? Btw > all the fans work correctly and opening the case helps nothing. > Would BIOS > tinkering be helpful - which settings could cause this? > > Any kind of assistance is much appreciated. Thanks. Cheers! > > P.S. My specs are: > Iwill KK266 MoBo/CMI8838 soundcard > AMD Athlon 1400 > 512 MB RAM > Radeon 9600Pro > > P.P.S. I have tried flashing the BIOS, but the official > installation on > IWill's website is corrupted - also, it's from 2002 so I doubt > it would help > much even if it was correct. http://www.memtest86.com/ Provide some specs for your psu, if you used a cheap psu that may be the problem, but I'm surprised that it would have lasted this long. -- Ian Memory test OK.
But I already knew that, since I borrowed RAM chips from my friend and the freezes still continued. How can I diagnose if the PSU is the problem? Or the inefficient processor fan or something? Since my MoBo doesn't contain temperature checks, is there some software that can tell me something like "95% chance that your processor is overheating"? Then I would gladly pay for new fan/PSU/whatever and get it over with. P.S. Here are some more diagnostic info in case somebody can make something out of it: Sandra check hangs every time, on various testing parts. The most frequent is on hard disk check (although I must add that I had also changed hard disks with my friend - mine works ok in his comp, my comp still freezes with his). Sometimes instead of the freeze i get a BSOD, but only for a fraction of a second. It's a 0x000000c IRQ_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL error. However this thing is happening rarely, mostly it's just a frozen desktop/game screen with a looping sound or something. Also I tried disabling the soundcard.. I think it makes freezes more infrequent, although I cannot be sure. Furthermore with the soundcard disabled the freezes are sometimes escapable with CTRL-ALT-DEL. Sometimes. All in all a very frustrating problem. Grr. Show quoteHide quote > Provide some specs for your psu, if you used a cheap psu that may > be the problem, but I'm surprised that it would have lasted this > long. > > -- > Ian > >
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"horseface" <horsef***@yahoo.com> wrote in message No such magical tool exists :-(news:d09sdd$9hr$1@bagan.srce.hr... > Memory test OK. > > But I already knew that, since I borrowed RAM chips from my > friend and the > freezes still continued. > > How can I diagnose if the PSU is the problem? Or the inefficient > processor > fan or something? Since my MoBo doesn't contain temperature > checks, is there > some software that can tell me something like "95% chance that > your > processor is overheating"? Then I would gladly pay for new > fan/PSU/whatever > and get it over with. > PC Health in the bios will tell you the system temps, or download something like Everest home edition. I've never heard of a mobo that doesn't provide temp and voltage info. http://www.lavalys.com/products/download.php?pid=1&lang=en&pageid=3 When you know temps and voltages post back and you'll get better advice. Show quoteHide quote > P.S. Here are some more diagnostic info in case somebody can That error is mostly assosiated with memory errors, (sometines > make something > out of it: > > Sandra check hangs every time, on various testing parts. The > most frequent > is on hard disk check (although I must add that I had also > changed hard > disks with my friend - mine works ok in his comp, my comp still > freezes with > his). > > Sometimes instead of the freeze i get a BSOD, but only for a > fraction of a > second. It's a 0x000000c IRQ_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL error. However > this thing is > happening rarely, mostly it's just a frozen desktop/game screen > with a > looping sound or something. > caused by buggy drivers). Switch off "restart after system failure"; Control Panel | System | Advanced tab | Startup and Recovery - Settings | System failure section - un-check Automatically restart. This will give you a chance to write down the error and google for it. > Also I tried disabling the soundcard.. I think it makes freezes Again, provide some specs for your psu.> more > infrequent, although I cannot be sure. Furthermore with the > soundcard > disabled the freezes are sometimes escapable with CTRL-ALT-DEL. > Sometimes. > > All in all a very frustrating problem. Grr. > -- Ian I have seen defective cards, and or power supply cause this type of fault.
The only good way to find this is to use the process of elimination. You will need boards to try. You try one at a time. It is a bit pain to go through with this, because you will need a full set of everything. I have worked on a fair number of computers in my time. I have seen everything from hard drives, to display cards, power supplies, and etc go intermittent. I had one machine that was stopping dead from time to time. Sometimes it would not do the fault for months at a time. I tried every board one at a time in the machine for over a period of about 5 months. In the end, the only thing left was the mother board. After changing the mother board, and leaving all the rest of the hardware as original, the problem never came back. To find the cause on the mother board, would not be feasible, and besides, just like all the rest of the computer cards, there is no support to service a mother board. When your machine was new, you should have persued the fault condition. Now that there is no warranty, and most of the original pieces inside are no longer available. If you really want to keep that old machine, I would suggest you buy a used one that is as close as possible to it. Then you will have a full computer to do the board swapping with, in order to weed out the defective area. If you do find a good used computer, you may want to use it as your main computer since it will probably be stable. You can then take some of the preferred cards from your old machine to the new-used one. It would be ironic, if the problem transferred when doing such a thing. -- Jerry G. ====== "horseface" <horsef***@yahoo.com> wrote in message I have a three year old comp which gave me problems from day one. Initiallynews:d09g2s$pm1$1@bagan.srce.hr... Hi everybody. it had trouble playing DVD's (random reset once or twice during play), but after installing Win2000 the problems went away. I still sometimes got a random freeze, but it happend once a month or so, so I dismissed it as random windows-quirks. This year I installed WinXP and the problems reappeared again. First I noticed that Word didn't work right (well that's an understatement - I opened word and it froze few minutes later so I had to do a hardware reset every time). Games stopped working (also a random freeze, sometimes after 5 minutes, sometimes after an hour) and playing a DVD means just begging for a reset. Now what I tried: - scanned for viruses/spyware - formatting hard disk/reinstalling system - installing service packs - changing drivers for video card/sound card/Via4in1 - putting different RAM, different video card, different hard-disk I reinstalled windows 2000 thinking it's aWinXP-MoBo incompatibility, but to my horror the problems stayed. Event log shows sqaut - no problems at all. Now I have simply run out of choices. Can somebody please tell me what might be the cause of this crap and what is the best way to diagnose it? If it's a heating problem, what's the best way to be sure (I am not into throwing money buying more components if I am not sure it would fix the problem)? Btw all the fans work correctly and opening the case helps nothing. Would BIOS tinkering be helpful - which settings could cause this? Any kind of assistance is much appreciated. Thanks. Cheers! P.S. My specs are: Iwill KK266 MoBo/CMI8838 soundcard AMD Athlon 1400 512 MB RAM Radeon 9600Pro P.P.S. I have tried flashing the BIOS, but the official installation on IWill's website is corrupted - also, it's from 2002 so I doubt it would help much even if it was correct. If you think it might be heat related, leave the case open (I know you said
you tried this)and even put an external fan blowing on the inside to cool it. Double check your master/slave jumpers and make sure they are correct. Since you did not state how you have your devices set up, you might explain that. If you have a Western Digital hard drive on an IDE channel by itself, make sure it is set to single and not master. If you have a CD or DVD burner, you might try making it master if you haven't already. If you run it in safe mode, does it lock up? Do you hear any noises just before it locks up? Use MSConfig to not start some programs to see if they are causing a conflict. Are you overclocking the processor? Do you use a USB mouse or PS/2? Clark Show quoteHide quote "horseface" <horsef***@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:d09g2s$pm1$1@bagan.srce.hr... > Hi everybody. > > I have a three year old comp which gave me problems from day one. > Initially > it had trouble playing DVD's (random reset once or twice during play), but > after installing Win2000 the problems went away. I still sometimes got a > random freeze, but it happend once a month or so, so I dismissed it as > random windows-quirks. > > This year I installed WinXP and the problems reappeared again. First I > noticed that Word didn't work right (well that's an understatement - I > opened word and it froze few minutes later so I had to do a hardware reset > every time). Games stopped working (also a random freeze, sometimes after > 5 > minutes, sometimes after an hour) and playing a DVD means just begging for > a > reset. > > Now what I tried: > - scanned for viruses/spyware > - formatting hard disk/reinstalling system > - installing service packs > - changing drivers for video card/sound card/Via4in1 > - putting different RAM, different video card, different hard-disk > > I reinstalled windows 2000 thinking it's aWinXP-MoBo incompatibility, but > to > my horror the problems stayed. Event log shows sqaut - no problems at all. > > Now I have simply run out of choices. Can somebody please tell me what > might > be the cause of this crap and what is the best way to diagnose it? If it's > a > heating problem, what's the best way to be sure (I am not into throwing > money buying more components if I am not sure it would fix the problem)? > Btw > all the fans work correctly and opening the case helps nothing. Would BIOS > tinkering be helpful - which settings could cause this? > > Any kind of assistance is much appreciated. Thanks. Cheers! > > P.S. My specs are: > Iwill KK266 MoBo/CMI8838 soundcard > AMD Athlon 1400 > 512 MB RAM > Radeon 9600Pro > > P.P.S. I have tried flashing the BIOS, but the official installation on > IWill's website is corrupted - also, it's from 2002 so I doubt it would > help > much even if it was correct. > > Not just that it locks in safe mode, it locked during memtest, so I
think I basically can assume the problem isn't software related. No overclocking. PS/2 mouse. Hard drive was set to single and to master, no difference. Anyway, thanks for the suggestions. The biggest problem is singling out the component (assuming that only one is doing this), but the trouble is finding a simmilar machine so I can test component after component. The other problem is that the error is erratic - sometimes for no reason at all the lock ups will cease, maybe even for a day or two. Anyway, thanks for the help. The first step in troubleshooting something like this is to remove
everything that is not required and then reinstall one at a time. Clark <baba44***@yahoo.com> wrote in message Show quoteHide quote news:1110361882.694973.129330@l41g2000cwc.googlegroups.com... > Not just that it locks in safe mode, it locked during memtest, so I > think I basically can assume the problem isn't software related. > > No overclocking. PS/2 mouse. Hard drive was set to single and to > master, no difference. > > Anyway, thanks for the suggestions. The biggest problem is singling out > the component (assuming that only one is doing this), but the trouble > is finding a simmilar machine so I can test component after component. > The other problem is that the error is erratic - sometimes for no > reason at all the lock ups will cease, maybe even for a day or two. > > Anyway, thanks for the help. > On 9 Mar 2005 01:51:22 -0800, baba44***@yahoo.com wrote:
>Not just that it locks in safe mode, it locked during memtest, so I Examine motherboard for failed capacitors.>think I basically can assume the problem isn't software related. > >No overclocking. PS/2 mouse. Hard drive was set to single and to >master, no difference. > >Anyway, thanks for the suggestions. The biggest problem is singling out >the component (assuming that only one is doing this), but the trouble >is finding a simmilar machine so I can test component after component. >The other problem is that the error is erratic - sometimes for no >reason at all the lock ups will cease, maybe even for a day or two. > >Anyway, thanks for the help. Take voltage readings. Take temp readings, check all fans. Check heatsink for dust accumulation, some old boards had poor temp monitoring due to sensor under the CPU rather than internal temp reading support. Try memory in a different slot, 1 module in the first and/or last slot. Try to get memtest86 to run stabily without error or lockup prior to booting the OS again. YOu may find that the OS or application files are now corrupt and _after_ the system is stable again you'd need to reinstall (things). Try clearing CMOS, loading defaults, and a newer bios if you find one intact. It is not relevant that it's from 2002, only that it's newer than the one currently used. If they fixed *all* problems on a bios why would they keep releasing new bios? Ideally all bios updates would be barely newer than the board itself, ceasing soon afterwards because they'd resolved all problems. In the real world you can only try it and see, but do try to get system as stable as possible before trying the bios, perhaps the last you tried wasn't actually corrupt but rather system instability resulted in the failure? Insufficient info to know. Strip system down to only minimal components... Video, 1 memory module, CPU, heatsink/fan, and either keyboard or floppy. Boot to bios menus (if keyboard) or memtest86 (if floppy) and let it sit there running, see if it locks up. If so, go into bios and underclock system as much as possible then retry same scenario. |
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