blue screen after power cut
Started by
islandcat
, Nov 27 2009 04:47 PM
#1
Posted 27 November 2009 - 04:47 PM
#2
Posted 28 November 2009 - 02:43 PM
Just to add a bit more. This is my sons computer so cant give you hardware info until I can tell him. But cant get into anything, not even through safe mode. It changes screens so fast before it stays on blue. I have a power bar and have never had a computer crash this way before. We have regular power outages here. If I can get the XP disc should I reinput the whole program? I am assuming I will have lost everything. Thanks for listening.
#3
Posted 28 November 2009 - 02:51 PM
Is it giving you a quick blue screen? If it is then we can try to get the information from it.
#4
Posted 28 November 2009 - 03:21 PM
Hi, thanks for responding. Maybe I have the wrong term? The blue screen has nothing on it at all. It goes through the screens pretty fast, the only other screen that stays up when I click on start up normal if interrupted due to power failure brings up full page of for example;multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\windows\system32\drivers\atapi.sys which I have seen others mention on here, dont know what this is called. Then to blank blue screen until I shut it down.
#5
Posted 28 November 2009 - 03:28 PM
What you are describing is the Safe mode boot up.
Have you gone to the advance boot menu options by tapping the F8 key when booting and then highlighting Last Know Good Configuration and clicking Enter? Does it boot up then?
Have you gone to the advance boot menu options by tapping the F8 key when booting and then highlighting Last Know Good Configuration and clicking Enter? Does it boot up then?
#6
Posted 28 November 2009 - 03:40 PM
I am pretty sure tried that but am going to try again. Back as soon as I dismantle my old puter and hook up other one for the 10th time lol.
#7
Posted 28 November 2009 - 03:51 PM
OK no problem. I will be here for another 7 hours or so
#8
Posted 28 November 2009 - 08:34 PM
Sorry about taking so long to get back couldnt get my old puter up. No cant get in doing what you said. I did go into Setup but didnt see anything too odd. I can give you more puter info now though. I am on AMD Athlong , 64 x 2 Dual Core Processor 4200. CPU Speed 2200 MHz, Cache Ram 512K x 2. No matter what I do cant get past the blank blue screen. Going into safe mode or any options there put me right into blue screen. It will wait awhile then go through the same screens over and over. I think I am in big trouble. I doubt it but hoping my son may know where the XP disc is???
#9
Posted 28 November 2009 - 08:53 PM
Well there is a few things we can try without the XP disk. On these instructions skip to the highlighted text at the bottom and do what it says. Then you will start up at the top with step 3. Let me know if this gets windows running again.
If you have Windows CD...
1. Insert your Windows XP CD into your CD and assure that your CD-ROM drive is capable of booting the CD.
2. Once you have booted from CD, do NOT select the option that states: Press F2 to initiate the Automated System Recovery (ASR) tool.
You’re going to proceed until you see the following screen, at which point you will press the “R” key to enter the recovery console:
3. After you have selected the appropriate option from step two, you will be prompted to select a valid Windows installation (typically number “1").
Select the installation number, and hit Enter.
If there is an administrator password for the administrator account, enter it and hit Enter (if asked for the password, and you don't know it, you're out of luck).
You will be greeted with this screen, which indicates a recovery console at the ready:
4. There are eight commands you must enter in sequence to repair any of the issues I noted in the opening of this guide.
I will introduce them here, and then show the results graphically in the next six steps.
NOTE. Make sure, you press Enter after each command. Make sure, all commands are exact, including "spaces".
These commands are as follows:
CD..
ATTRIB -H C:\\boot.ini
ATTRIB -S C:\\boot.ini
ATRIB -R C:\\boot.ini
del boot.ini
BOOTCFG /Rebuild
Note about the above command.
BOOTCFG /REBUILD command which searches for pre-existing installations of Windows XP and rebuilds sundry essential components of the Windows operating system, recompiles the BOOT.INI file and corrects a litany of common Windows errors.
It is very important that you do one or both of the following two things:
A.) Every Windows XP owner must use /FASTDETECT as OS Load Option when the rebuild process is finalizing.
B.) If you are the owner of a CPU featuring Intel’s XD or AMD’s NX buffer overflow protection, you must also use /NOEXECUTE=OPTIN as an OS Load Option.
For the Enter Load Identifier portion of this command, you should enter the name of the operating system you have installed.
If, for example, you are using Windows XP Home, you could type Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition for the identifier (it's not crucial, however what the name is, as long, as it's meaningful).
Here is your computer screen:
5. Following command verifies the integrity of the hard drive containing the Windows XP installation. While this step is not an essential function in our process, it’s still good to be sure that the drive is physically capable of running windows, in that it contains no bad sectors or other corruptions that might be the culprit:
CHKDSK /R
6. This last command writes a new boot sector to the hard drive and cleans up all the loose ends we created by rebuilding the BOOT.INI file and the system files. When the Windows Recovery Console asks you if you are Sure you want to write a new bootsector to the partition C: ? just hit “Y”, then Enter to confirm your decision:
FIXBOOT
7. It’s time to reboot your PC by typing
EXIT
and pressing Enter.
With any luck, your PC will boot successfully into Windows XP as if your various DLL, Hive, EXE and NTLDR errors never existed.
2. If you don't have Windows CD...
Download Windows Recovery Console: http://www.thecomput...om/files/rc.iso
Download, and install free Imgburn: http://www.imgburn.c...hp?act=download
Using Imgburn, burn rc.iso to a CD.
Boot to the CD...let it finish loading.
When the "Welcome to Setup" screen appears, press R to start the Recovery Console.
Then, follow instructions from Step #3 above.
Thanks To Broni For The Instructions
If you have Windows CD...
1. Insert your Windows XP CD into your CD and assure that your CD-ROM drive is capable of booting the CD.
2. Once you have booted from CD, do NOT select the option that states: Press F2 to initiate the Automated System Recovery (ASR) tool.
You’re going to proceed until you see the following screen, at which point you will press the “R” key to enter the recovery console:
3. After you have selected the appropriate option from step two, you will be prompted to select a valid Windows installation (typically number “1").
Select the installation number, and hit Enter.
If there is an administrator password for the administrator account, enter it and hit Enter (if asked for the password, and you don't know it, you're out of luck).
You will be greeted with this screen, which indicates a recovery console at the ready:
4. There are eight commands you must enter in sequence to repair any of the issues I noted in the opening of this guide.
I will introduce them here, and then show the results graphically in the next six steps.
NOTE. Make sure, you press Enter after each command. Make sure, all commands are exact, including "spaces".
These commands are as follows:
CD..
ATTRIB -H C:\\boot.ini
ATTRIB -S C:\\boot.ini
ATRIB -R C:\\boot.ini
del boot.ini
BOOTCFG /Rebuild
Note about the above command.
BOOTCFG /REBUILD command which searches for pre-existing installations of Windows XP and rebuilds sundry essential components of the Windows operating system, recompiles the BOOT.INI file and corrects a litany of common Windows errors.
It is very important that you do one or both of the following two things:
A.) Every Windows XP owner must use /FASTDETECT as OS Load Option when the rebuild process is finalizing.
B.) If you are the owner of a CPU featuring Intel’s XD or AMD’s NX buffer overflow protection, you must also use /NOEXECUTE=OPTIN as an OS Load Option.
For the Enter Load Identifier portion of this command, you should enter the name of the operating system you have installed.
If, for example, you are using Windows XP Home, you could type Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition for the identifier (it's not crucial, however what the name is, as long, as it's meaningful).
Here is your computer screen:
5. Following command verifies the integrity of the hard drive containing the Windows XP installation. While this step is not an essential function in our process, it’s still good to be sure that the drive is physically capable of running windows, in that it contains no bad sectors or other corruptions that might be the culprit:
CHKDSK /R
6. This last command writes a new boot sector to the hard drive and cleans up all the loose ends we created by rebuilding the BOOT.INI file and the system files. When the Windows Recovery Console asks you if you are Sure you want to write a new bootsector to the partition C: ? just hit “Y”, then Enter to confirm your decision:
FIXBOOT
7. It’s time to reboot your PC by typing
EXIT
and pressing Enter.
With any luck, your PC will boot successfully into Windows XP as if your various DLL, Hive, EXE and NTLDR errors never existed.
2. If you don't have Windows CD...
Download Windows Recovery Console: http://www.thecomput...om/files/rc.iso
Download, and install free Imgburn: http://www.imgburn.c...hp?act=download
Using Imgburn, burn rc.iso to a CD.
Boot to the CD...let it finish loading.
When the "Welcome to Setup" screen appears, press R to start the Recovery Console.
Then, follow instructions from Step #3 above.
Thanks To Broni For The Instructions
#10
Posted 28 November 2009 - 09:02 PM
Sorry about taking so long to get back couldnt get my old puter up. No cant get in doing what you said. I did go into Setup but didnt see anything too odd. I can give you more puter info now though. I am on AMD Athlong , 64 x 2 Dual Core Processor 4200. CPU Speed 2200 MHz, Cache Ram 512K x 2. No matter what I do cant get past the blank blue screen. Going into safe mode or any options there put me right into blue screen. It will wait awhile then go through the same screens over and over. I think I am in big trouble. I doubt it but hoping my son may know where the XP disc is???
#11
Posted 28 November 2009 - 09:09 PM
You may have to go into the bios and set the boot sequence to boot to cdrom to do the steps I sent in my previous post.
#12
Posted 28 November 2009 - 09:12 PM
Sorry for repeat. I will try what you said but will have to get back to this so dont think I have not responded. This puter cannot burn cd's anymore and of course cant use the newer one so will have to find someone to do this for me. I even have a borrowed laptop to communicate if this one quits. Again thanks will get back here as soon as I can get a cd burned.
#13
Posted 28 November 2009 - 09:26 PM
No problem on the wait time. I will continue to watch this topic for your return. I am here till the end regardless of what that is.
#14
Posted 29 November 2009 - 03:25 PM
Hi back again. On borrowed puter trying to download and burn cd. Dumb question when I go the computer paramedic site there is no where on there that gives me Windows Recovery Console?? Where do I go on there, its offering related software but none of those are showing the recovery console. Hoping you are around today. Thanks
#15
Posted 29 November 2009 - 03:49 PM
When I click on the link for the RC it auto downloads the rc.
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