Most of the time when Windows wont boot on a new board in my
experience it's some onboard peripheral, like a NIC, or sound card.
Try disabling that stuff in the bios if it exists.

-- 
jon
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Thursday, October 3, 2002, 8:58:25 PM, you wrote:

HH> ----- Original Message ----- 
HH> From: "Kevin Graeme" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
HH> To: "CF-Community" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
HH> Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2002 7:08 PM
HH> Subject: RE: WIN2K w/new motherboard


>> Are you saying that you have replaced it already and you're having problems
>> getting it to boot?
>> 

HH> yes...

>> Generally, it's best to reinstall fresh when you change the motherboard. If
>> it's an identical model board, then you might not have to reinstall. If it's
>> the same chipset but a different manufacturer, you might just have to run a
>> repair or installers for the differences. But generally, I just do a clean
>> reinstall of the OS.
>> 

HH> Bah, I was afraid someone would say that.

HH> Thanks for your advice.

HH> Regards,

HH> Howie


>> Kevin Graeme
>> 



HH> 
______________________________________________________________________
Get the mailserver that powers this list at http://www.coolfusion.com

Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists

Reply via email to