Laptop Problem - won't boot up.
Laptop Problem - won't boot up.
Hi folks, can anyone point me in the right direction regarding my laptop issue??? I'll try summarise concisely below.
Essentially, my laptop sporadically fails to boot up.
It even fails to get beyond the POST screen. However, occasionally it does work as it should.
On pressing the power button to initiate boot up, the LEDs signifying hard drive, system, and caps lock etc - they all flash as soon as I hit the power button. As soon as these flash, the machine makes it's usual noises and then tries to access the cd rom looking for boot information. If the laptop is working you hear it try to access the CD and as soon as it works out there isnt a cd in the drive, it flashes immediately the POST screen, and then subsequently boots up ok. When it isn't working however, it seems to access the CD rom drive, and then grinds to a halt.
The power to the laptop stays on rather than the machine switching itself off. I appears to "hang" as soon as it has accessed the CD Rom.
Any ideas what could be causing the problem?
System Spec - Pentium 4 3 ghz. 800 mhz FSB. 512 meg ram.
Dual Boot (Audio and General Partitions)
The interesting thing about the problem is the fact that it doesn't always occur. I can be there for an hour tryining to start the thing, and then all of a sudden for no apparent reason it will boot up fine. This will be after fruitlessly disconnecting all peripherals, and reconnecting in all the possible permutations - ie disconnecting all cables incl power to boot from battery, then add power cable, and so forth.
Any ideas???
Lowride
Essentially, my laptop sporadically fails to boot up.
It even fails to get beyond the POST screen. However, occasionally it does work as it should.
On pressing the power button to initiate boot up, the LEDs signifying hard drive, system, and caps lock etc - they all flash as soon as I hit the power button. As soon as these flash, the machine makes it's usual noises and then tries to access the cd rom looking for boot information. If the laptop is working you hear it try to access the CD and as soon as it works out there isnt a cd in the drive, it flashes immediately the POST screen, and then subsequently boots up ok. When it isn't working however, it seems to access the CD rom drive, and then grinds to a halt.
The power to the laptop stays on rather than the machine switching itself off. I appears to "hang" as soon as it has accessed the CD Rom.
Any ideas what could be causing the problem?
System Spec - Pentium 4 3 ghz. 800 mhz FSB. 512 meg ram.
Dual Boot (Audio and General Partitions)
The interesting thing about the problem is the fact that it doesn't always occur. I can be there for an hour tryining to start the thing, and then all of a sudden for no apparent reason it will boot up fine. This will be after fruitlessly disconnecting all peripherals, and reconnecting in all the possible permutations - ie disconnecting all cables incl power to boot from battery, then add power cable, and so forth.
Any ideas???
Lowride
well - off the top of my head - I'd say you have a bit of a problem....
wouldn't you say?
wouldn't you say?
P-4 3.0ghz 1.5 gb ram - ata +sata+usb+firewire
Matrox dual g450 adapter - MBOX - XP Pro SP 2 - Pro Tools LE 6.9 - Reason 3 - Korg Legacy - Guitar Rig - Amplitube - Ozone -Kantos -PSP Collection - Kontact - Waves - Sampletank - Tracks
Matrox dual g450 adapter - MBOX - XP Pro SP 2 - Pro Tools LE 6.9 - Reason 3 - Korg Legacy - Guitar Rig - Amplitube - Ozone -Kantos -PSP Collection - Kontact - Waves - Sampletank - Tracks
Related to temperature??? Why? It doesn't boot up even when it has been sitting switched of for hours. When it is pulled straight out from it's case.
Strangely though, If I manage to get it to go, and decide to restart it to use the other boot partition, it doesn't fail to boot correctly, even after it has been switched on for hours...
Lowride
Strangely though, If I manage to get it to go, and decide to restart it to use the other boot partition, it doesn't fail to boot correctly, even after it has been switched on for hours...
Lowride
Last edited by Lowride on Fri Sep 09, 2005 9:39 am, edited 2 times in total.
he he -just kidding..
It sounds to me like you have either a problem with your boot loader - you have a dual boot system - are both os's on the same drive partition? Hope not...
Other thing to check before you throw in the towel are the basic things - if your boot loader is corrupted or on its way to being unusable you might be able to aver disaster by defragmenting - but not with the built in defrag but rather go download a demo of diskkeeper and make sure you get it to defragment the MFT. The defrag will also help consolidatre data. Also run chkdsk -
If it isn't a corruption problem - then you may be facing impending doom with your hard disk make sure you backe everything up.
Also check the boot order in your system bios and put the HD first -
Take out the CD drive when you boot - I have a feeling it will behave differently with the drive removed.
and of course mame sure you haven't been infected with some virus - you can go to housecall.antivirus.com for an online virus, security and spyware check - this is trend micro's web service.
if the machine beeps a few times when it is turning on count how many long and short beeps... that will let you know what kind of problem it is.
good luck -
It sounds to me like you have either a problem with your boot loader - you have a dual boot system - are both os's on the same drive partition? Hope not...
Other thing to check before you throw in the towel are the basic things - if your boot loader is corrupted or on its way to being unusable you might be able to aver disaster by defragmenting - but not with the built in defrag but rather go download a demo of diskkeeper and make sure you get it to defragment the MFT. The defrag will also help consolidatre data. Also run chkdsk -
If it isn't a corruption problem - then you may be facing impending doom with your hard disk make sure you backe everything up.
Also check the boot order in your system bios and put the HD first -
Take out the CD drive when you boot - I have a feeling it will behave differently with the drive removed.
and of course mame sure you haven't been infected with some virus - you can go to housecall.antivirus.com for an online virus, security and spyware check - this is trend micro's web service.
if the machine beeps a few times when it is turning on count how many long and short beeps... that will let you know what kind of problem it is.
good luck -
P-4 3.0ghz 1.5 gb ram - ata +sata+usb+firewire
Matrox dual g450 adapter - MBOX - XP Pro SP 2 - Pro Tools LE 6.9 - Reason 3 - Korg Legacy - Guitar Rig - Amplitube - Ozone -Kantos -PSP Collection - Kontact - Waves - Sampletank - Tracks
Matrox dual g450 adapter - MBOX - XP Pro SP 2 - Pro Tools LE 6.9 - Reason 3 - Korg Legacy - Guitar Rig - Amplitube - Ozone -Kantos -PSP Collection - Kontact - Waves - Sampletank - Tracks
The machine always beeps once when it boots up , and this beep always occurs simultaneously with the flash of the POST screen.
Could it be a virus issue, even though it doesn't get passed the POST screen?? Why should it sometimes work perfectly, completley glitch free, and others not at all??? Seems completley bizarre. Surely if it's broke, it's broke?
Lowride
Could it be a virus issue, even though it doesn't get passed the POST screen?? Why should it sometimes work perfectly, completley glitch free, and others not at all??? Seems completley bizarre. Surely if it's broke, it's broke?
Lowride
Last edited by Lowride on Fri Sep 09, 2005 9:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
So? I didn't say heat was the problem.Lowride wrote:Related to temperature??? Why? It doesn't boot up even when it has been sitting switched of for hours. When it is pulled straight out from it's case.
My point exactly.Strangely though, If I manage to get it to go, and decide to restart it to use the other boot partition, it doesn't fail to boot correctly, even after it has been switched on for hours...
First things first: you've made a backup right?
Edit - and a virus at that point is *highly* unlikely, if not impossible.
Ah, so it shouldn't a big problem to fix. Is it necessary to send back to base for repair???
Any idea what would be likely to have casued this dodgy connection? The reason I ask is that 6 months ago it had a serious problem in which the motherboard needed replaced. I'm just wondering if both of these issues could be connected...
Lowride
Any idea what would be likely to have casued this dodgy connection? The reason I ask is that 6 months ago it had a serious problem in which the motherboard needed replaced. I'm just wondering if both of these issues could be connected...
Lowride
Last edited by Lowride on Fri Sep 09, 2005 9:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
Motherboard = PCB. So it might be related.
It could be caused by all sorts of things, *but* if it fails consistantly when it's cold, they can reproduce the problem and fix it. I'd send it back in that case as the problem can get worse over time...
This is one of the reasons why they do burn-in tests (hot and cold) btw.
It could be caused by all sorts of things, *but* if it fails consistantly when it's cold, they can reproduce the problem and fix it. I'd send it back in that case as the problem can get worse over time...
This is one of the reasons why they do burn-in tests (hot and cold) btw.
Tuur, it sounds like you may have hit the nail on the head. It has progressively got worse over time. Initially it would only happen sporadically. Now I;m almost guaranteed that it won't work.
My concern is this though. Would you say that this is a major fault?
In the past year since I have had the machine I have had these 2 problems. Firstly, the motherboard goes caput after about 6 months. Secondly this problem rears it's head shortly after I get the laptop back from the first repair. I have ahd the laptop for just over a year now, so any warranty I have will be obsolete within the next 10 months. I'm very concerned that another problem may develop after this time which needs drastic attention, and/or require purchasing new components.
Would you say I am in a position to demand a replacement machine, or am I over reacting? The machine was bought for doing prodcution work, and playing live. As it is, it has bareley been fit for purpose - ie mega unreliable at booting up. How can I possibly fulfil live events with such a machine...
Lowride
My concern is this though. Would you say that this is a major fault?
In the past year since I have had the machine I have had these 2 problems. Firstly, the motherboard goes caput after about 6 months. Secondly this problem rears it's head shortly after I get the laptop back from the first repair. I have ahd the laptop for just over a year now, so any warranty I have will be obsolete within the next 10 months. I'm very concerned that another problem may develop after this time which needs drastic attention, and/or require purchasing new components.
Would you say I am in a position to demand a replacement machine, or am I over reacting? The machine was bought for doing prodcution work, and playing live. As it is, it has bareley been fit for purpose - ie mega unreliable at booting up. How can I possibly fulfil live events with such a machine...
Lowride
Last edited by Lowride on Fri Sep 09, 2005 9:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
As long as you don't do some 'extreme laptopping' I'd say it is a major fault. Maybe even a production problem (you might try to google for that, maybe there are other reports).Lowride wrote:My concern is this though. Would you say that this is a major fault? In the past year since I have had the machine I have had these 2 problems. Firstly, the motherboard goes caput after about 6 months. Secondly this problem rears it's head shortly after I get the laptop back from the first repair.
You can always try (both the manufacturer and your dealer)...Would you say I am in a position to demand a replacement machine, or am I over reacting? The machine was bought for doing prodcution work, and playing live. As it is, it has bareley been fit for purpose - ie mega unreliable at booting up. How can I possibly fulfil live events with such a machine...
I wouldn't say you're over reacting though. FWIW.