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Computer Boots to BSOD
Forum: Windows XP
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#1 By 76115 (216.16.34.154) at Monday, March 26, 2007 10:37:08 AM
I have tried eveything that i can think of and i cannot figure this out. My computer boots fine to safe mode but not in normal mode. I boot to normal and it starts booting then goes to the BSOD. I have tried doing chkdsk /p & /r in recovery consle. I have tried to repair the windows installation and checked all over the internet. I dont know what to do. I dont know if this is possible but this is what i am thinking about doing. I would create a new partion and install a fresh version of XP on that partion and install all new drivers. After that i would transfer all of my backups, music and photos to the new partition and delete the old partion. Is this possible? I would only do this as a last resort. Is there anything you guys can suggest before i do this. Thanks for your time.

#2 By 655 (165.125.144.17) at Monday, March 26, 2007 11:19:49 AM
What did you install (or do) prior to this problem starting? It sounds like there is an incorrect or bad driver that's causing this. Also, when the BSOD screen comes up, does it give any information as to what the problem is related to? I'd suggest booting into Safemode and backup your data from there. Then do a complete reformat/reinstall. ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 1gig RAM, nVidia 5200; SB Live Value; Windows Vista Business, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D200 and D100

#3 By 76115 (216.16.34.154) at Monday, March 26, 2007 11:32:32 AM
I did a couple of things. I took out my old wireless card and put a different one in without uninstalling the old drivers. I also updated the ethernet drivers for my built in ethernet connection. Another thing i did was install some unsigned drivers for my video card because it asked me to when i tried to repair XP. I will get you the error code when i go home for lunch. I dont really know where to look or how to uninstall drivers so i may need a little advice or help with that. Thanks for the reply.

#4 By 76115 (216.16.34.154) at Monday, March 26, 2007 01:19:18 PM
The error i get is: Stop: 0x0000007E (0xc0000005, 0xBA42E184, 0xBAD0AD44, 0xBAD0aa40) I want to delete the drivers for the video card and both wireless card. How would i go about doing that?

#5 By 655 (165.125.144.17) at Monday, March 26, 2007 01:47:01 PM
To uninstall drivers, go to Control Panel/Add Remove Programs. Unintall drivers (and programs) from there. Suggest you also Google the above stop error for other solutions. ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 1gig RAM, nVidia 5200; SB Live Value; Windows Vista Business, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D200 and D100

#6 By 76115 (216.16.34.154) at Monday, March 26, 2007 02:34:13 PM
I will try that and let you know. I dont think that will work but i will give it a try. I tried searching for that error on the microsoft website and the net and i couldnt find anything with those parameters. I will try it.

#7 By 655 (165.125.144.17) at Monday, March 26, 2007 02:58:54 PM
The above method of uninstalling drivers (and programs) will work, because it's the proper way. As to the stop error, check out this google page. I googled just the set of information (0x0000007E and found http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Stop%3A+0x0000007E+&btnG=Google+Search ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 1gig RAM, nVidia 5200; SB Live Value; Windows Vista Business, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D200 and D100

#8 By 76115 (216.16.34.154) at Tuesday, April 03, 2007 08:34:14 AM
I got it to boot by doing what you said. I cleared all the drivers i could find. I found out that i was using xp64 bit drivers. I thought that i had bought the 64 bit system but I checked the disc and it was the 32bit one. Oh well. I have two more questions for you though. I now have two wireless cards in device manager. I try to uninstall the old one but it gives me an error saying that it cannot be removed because it may be neede for the computer to boot. Do you have any idea how to get rid of that? Also my internet does not work. I scanned it and it was clean. Also i double click the my IE7 icon and it does nothing except it creates a shortcut on the desktop. If i keep clicking it, it just keeps creating shortcuts. Please let me know if you have any ideas on these things. Thank you so much for your time already.

#9 By 655 (165.125.144.17) at Tuesday, April 03, 2007 09:55:52 AM
Boot into safemode to uninstall the driver. As to why the internet doesn't work, there's little information to tell why. If you're trying to connect using the wireless cards, and the wrong driver was installed, that could be the problem. Given all of the issues, especially installing 64bit drivers on a 32bit system, you might want to consider doing a complete reformat/clean install and make sure you put in all of the correct drivers. ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 1gig RAM, nVidia 5200; SB Live Value; Windows Vista Business, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D200 and D100

#10 By 76115 (216.16.34.154) at Tuesday, April 03, 2007 10:10:16 AM
Ok. That is what i was thinking. I porbably should have done that to save some in the first place. So my question to you is can i create a new partition to put my pictures, music, etc on so i dont lose it when i format? If so how do i create a partition and how do i make sure that i dont format that partition so i can keep everything on that partition. Thanks agian for your time.

#11 By 655 (165.125.144.17) at Tuesday, April 03, 2007 10:48:53 AM
I'd copy 'em to a CD or DVD first. Not knowing how much space you have, and it'd be a better way to back them up rather than to leave 'em on a partition. ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 1gig RAM, nVidia 5200; SB Live Value; Windows Vista Business, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D200 and D100



 

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