People may read this in utter disbelief, but try a third chip if you have one around. Also, do you have an exact error description for the error code? Does this box get really hot?
You may also want to check if your WfW 3.11 installation is messed up. Regards, Dustin At 07:57 PM 7/2/2002 -0500, you wrote: >I have an interesting situation that I have not yet been able to resolve. I >suspect that I am dealing with hardware issues. I have not ever encountered >such and am therefore soliciting assistance. Any that can be provided would >be greatly appreciated. > >System: >AMD 2000+ XP CPU >EPoX EP-8KHA+ Motherboard >1GB PC2100 DDR RAM >ATI Raedon 7000 AGP (64 MB) >Typical CDROM, HD, FD, etc. > >This is the information I sent to EPoX: >--- >It should be noted that prior to the following events, the system as >configured ran flawlessly: > > After a system lockup, a cold boot was required. The system was found to > not be bootable. > > The POST code received during a boot attempt is C1h (the motherboard > displays a hexadecimal code to help with trouble shooting. C1h has to do > with memory problems). The existing memory was replaced with new PC2100 > (non-ECC) 512 MB DDR DIMMs, the code remained C1h. The CPU Host Clock was > set checked and found to be set to 133 MHz. >--- > >Again, any assistance in this matter would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. > >-K > >P.S. I just returned from Houston after nearly 3 months. It sure is good to >be home. > > >_______________________________________________ >General mailing list >[email protected] >http://brlug.net/mailman/listinfo/general_brlug.net --- Dustin Puryear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> UNIX and Network Consultant http://members.telocity.com/~dpuryear PGP Key available at http://www.us.pgp.net In the beginning the Universe was created. This has been widely regarded as a bad move. - Douglas Adams
