Having been through a similar experience recently the best thing you can
do at this moment is to back up all your important files to somewhere
else and then play with fixing the disk.  Not being an expert in hard
disks, I would say that the boot sector could be messed up and the fact
that you have an ERD is a good thing.  Try running fixboot and it might
work. If not then fixmbr.


View this page before you do anything:
http://makeashorterlink.com/?Z5A3142D4



Matthew Small
IT Director
Showstopper American Dance Championships
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
843-357-1847
 

-----Original Message-----
From: cfhelp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2003 11:12 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: W2K BSOD

The IRQ Stop error usually means hardware.

If you have another video card swap them out. Then reboot and install
SP3.
You may also want to remove your sound card and reboot. A lot of times
you
just need to reseat the cards.

Then run Defrag again, reboot and re-install SP3 again.

Rick 


-----Original Message-----
From: Haggerty, Mike [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2003 9:42 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: W2K BSOD

Okay, I'm having some trouble with my PC and I cannot get it going
again.
Looking for some advice...

Win2K Pro, AMD 2800+, 1.5 GB ram, 40 GB hard drive.

Last Friday I was playing Warcraft III and the machine just froze. I
said,
'That's weird' and rebooted. Started the game up again and it froze
again.
When I rebooted again, I noticed it was taking a really long time to
reboot.
Started the game again, froze again, repeated process several times
until
the machine would suddenly just reboot after I logged in.

After a while, it would not boot at all. I would get a blue screen of
death,
mentioning one of several stop errors:

- IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
- KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED
- INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE

Every once in a while, the machine would actually get around to booting
up.
What would happen was fantastically pathetic, nothing works right and
the
computer freezes within one minute.

I proceed to use the emergency recovery process on the W2K disk. Gets
rid of
the BSODs long enough that I can boot into safe mode and see the
following
interesting data: 

1) The computer says I have 5 GB of room left
2) The disk defragmenter says I have 75% fragmentation
3) The event log has 400 entries for fatal errors occurring when the
machine
tries to write to the paging file.

So, alright, I can take a hint: defrag the disk. I analyze the disk
first,
and it shows something entirely confusing. In the disk analyzer, there
are
no sections of free space on the disk. Everything that is not green
(meaning
system files) is red (meaning fragmented files). No happy white areas...
I
try running the defragmenter, the machine spits out a BSOD as soon as I
do,
I go through the ERP once again to get it to start again. I decide
CYGWIN,
XWINDOWS, and other nifty Linux stuff is not as important as disk space,
take that off and get back about 10GB. Go to run the disk defragmenter
again, and this one, thin strip of free space is all that I got.

What it seems to me is happening is that g0bbamned game wrote a gigantic
amount of data to the disk 'under the radar', and only the game can get
rid
of it. Of course, since I cannot see the files I have no way to work
with
them.

Of course, I could be wildly off base. 

Anyone have any interesting advice on how to even approach this problem?

M



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