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I'm in installation hell!

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  • I'm in installation hell!

    Specs:

    Asus A7V266-E
    1.2GHz Athlon 100MHz FSB
    ATI AIW Radeon 32MB DDR
    512MB Mushkin PC2100 DDR
    SB Audigy Platinum
    Intel NIC
    2xIBM 40GB RAID(Striping)
    1xIBM 15GB
    HP CDRW 10x4x32 9300i
    Samsung DVD
    Mistubishi DP 2040u 22"


    Quick note: Win98se installs and works just fine


    Problem:

    I reformatted all HDD, installed WinXP, upon reboot, I got a STOP message:

    "A problem has been detected and windows has been shut down to prevent damage to your computer."

    "STOP: 0x0000007B "

    Now, a lot has happened before I got to this point but it is too much detail. Since this has happened, I have tried everything from removing all of the hardware, to changing memory slots to reseating all of the cards, to redoing my RAID setup a billion times, to re-installing the OS 500 thousand times, etc...
    I have checked all of the A7V fan sites that I know of, check all of Microsoft, but nothing leads me to a true resolution. I have tried different BIOS, etc... IF anyone has ever had any experience with this stop message or you have some advice, I would be most grateful. Let me know if you need more info.

    Thanks,

    Dave
    Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.

  • #2
    The damage to your computer thing sounds temp related.

    Does your mobo have temp readings, and or fan speed readings? If you have your CPU fan plugged into the wrong fan header, XP might be reading your CPU fan as not spinning, and be shutting off.

    Are you sure your CPU isnt getting a little hot? did you bump it, and move the contact area with your heatsink?

    Ali

    Comment


    • #3
      I had this problem recently. Turned out to be the CD rom not liking XP(or vice versa). Once i unplugged it went on fine. Ended up using an old generic CD rom that i had laying around

      gotta be worth a try
      1st system

      Athlon AXIA Y 1Ghz @ 1.40Ghz, coolermaster hsf, Elite K7s6a, 512 MB Crucial DDR RAM, 20GB IBM 7200RPM Hard drive, Radeon 8500le 64mb, SB Audigy, 3 com 10/100NIC, 300w PSU, midi tower, FPS 1600 Surround, Belinea 17" monitor, Intellimouse explorer USB

      System 2

      Athlon TB 1.4 @ 1.5, Zalman Flower in silent mode, Elite K7S6A, 768MB DDRAM, Ati Radeon 8500le 64mb ddr, SB Audigy, 3Com 10/100NIC, 80GB IBM 7200rpm, Liteon 16 speed DVD, Lite-on 24102b CDRW, Songcheer Superwide, USB scanner, Intellimouse explorer, Microsoft keyboard, 19in iiyama Monitor, FPS1600

      system 3
      Abit ST6 RAID, Celly 1.2 @1.4 ,512MB SDRAM, Zalman Flower HSF noisey mode, ATi Radeon 8500le, SBLIVE, 3com 10/100 NIC, 80GB Seagate barracude HDD, 40GB IBM120GXP, 60GB IBM60GXP,Extra highpoint controller card, 16x Pioneer DVD, Pioneer DVR-104 DVD-RW, ATX Full tower case. 300w psu, 17in LG monitor, 20in Samsumg telly, epson stylus colour 880, 200W RMS Surround sound amp with Mission M71 Speakers.
      .

      System 4
      Elite K7S5A, Duron 1.0, 128mb sdram, Coolermaster hsf, 80GB 120GXP IBM, Liteon 16x DVD, Radeon 7200 64MB DDR, SBLIVE.

      Linksys 4 port router/firewall

      512k Cable modem. nice

      Comment


      • #4
        I assume you read M$ statements on this being an inaccessable boot device...
        The Stop 0x7B message indicates that Windows XP Professional has lost access to the system partition or boot volume during the startup process. Installing incorrect device drivers when installing or upgrading storage adapter hardware....etc

        So check the RAID drivers for XP that you are using, and the XP drivers for the controller onboard DL them again if needed and try again?

        my $0.02
        Last edited by Dilitante1; 28 April 2002, 16:52.
        Better to let one think you are a fool, than speak and prove it


        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Ali
          The damage to your computer thing sounds temp related.

          Does your mobo have temp readings, and or fan speed readings? If you have your CPU fan plugged into the wrong fan header, XP might be reading your CPU fan as not spinning, and be shutting off.

          Are you sure your CPU isnt getting a little hot? did you bump it, and move the contact area with your heatsink?

          Ali
          All temps look good in the BIOS. But thanks for the help Ali

          Dave
          Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by birdy
            I had this problem recently. Turned out to be the CD rom not liking XP(or vice versa). Once i unplugged it went on fine. Ended up using an old generic CD rom that i had laying around

            gotta be worth a try
            I removed everything. I have two CD-ROMs and I tried both, one at a time, and none at all. Only thing I haven't tried yet is a new video card. hmmm...Wish there was a new video card coming out that I want to buy that I could try out Thanks for the help birdy

            Dave
            Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Dilitante1
              I assume you read M$ statements on this being an inaccessable boot device...
              The Stop 0x7B message indicates that Windows XP Professional has lost access to the system partition or boot volume during the startup process. Installing incorrect device drivers when installing or upgrading storage adapter hardware....etc

              So check the RAID drivers for XP that you are using, and the XP drivers for the controller onboard DL them again if needed and try again?

              my $0.02
              Hi Dil,

              I did read all of the info re: the 0x7b stuff. Definitely seems to be pointing to my RAID setup or partition or mbr info. I have been concentrating in this area. I have tried the default XP drivers(which have worked in the past), I have tried newer rAIS drivers from Asus, I've recreated the RAID array in stripe and mirror mode. It's weird since XP has been running fine since September and Win98se installs just fine. I even tried FDISK /mbr command just for grins but that didn't help.

              Currently, I am removing RAID, FDISKing, Partitioning, and re-formatting each disk seperately hoping that maybe something was just a little screwy with RAID. If this doesn't work I might have to resort to replacing one thing at a time to see if I can fix the problem. Sucks though because I am kinda broke right now. OH yeah! one more thing! At one point, the promise controller complained that I had some kind of IRQ problem. At that point, I removed all devices, and juggled some IRQ's around in BIO but still no luck. I have promise on 10, ATI on 11, IDE on 14/15. sigh...one HDD is almost finsihed formatting and then I'll do the other. Thanks again everyone.

              Dave
              Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.

              Comment


              • #8
                Try installing it without using the RAID.

                Rags

                Comment


                • #9
                  Oh and use the recovery console if you suspect a boot sector problem.

                  Rags

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    OK, I have run into this issue under Win2K Pro. Only way was to install Promise card AFTER OS is up and running. I istall the Promise card, reboot, verify, then shift over to Promise card for next boot.....might be worth a shot


                    -Dil
                    Better to let one think you are a fool, than speak and prove it


                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Problem with that is, once you setup RAID, you have to reformat. I guess I could instll everything, ghost it, RAID it, and pray. Well, I'm almost done formatting the second HDD. After that I will try a normal RAID again with nothing else in the system except the HDDs, video card, and one cd-rom.

                      Dave
                      Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        what kind of RAID? 0,1,5?

                        if RAID is software via OS, Win2K handles it as dynamic drives which are not bootable.(I am assuming XP handles it the same way)

                        If the RAID is hardware with a dedicated controller, the RAID is configured prior to OS installation.

                        So what you saying confuses me a bit Dave.


                        -Dil
                        Better to let one think you are a fool, than speak and prove it


                        Comment


                        • #13
                          It's hardware RAID. I have a promise chip on my motherboard. I can either do raid 1 or 0. I am getting ready to try striping(again).

                          Dave
                          Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice, pull down your pants and slide on the ice.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            It definitely sounds like a RAID driver problem. Have you tried downloading the Promise drivers from the Promise website . I've found that those usually are more up-to-date than the drivers provided by the motherboard manufacturers. Also, recently I've started using the Promise FastTrak TX2000 drivers. These seem to have support for nearly all previous Promise controllers built-in, and provided a minor performance boost over what I was using (from MSI). I'm pretty sure the FastTrak100 controller on your motherboard would be supported by the same driver set, if you would like to give them a try.

                            Good luck figuring this one out.
                            "..so much for subtlety.."

                            System specs:
                            Gainward Ti4600
                            AMD Athlon XP2100+ (o.c. to 1845MHz)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I get the same message whenever I forget to hit F5 (or whatever) to install a specific SCSI adaptor driver.

                              From reading your posts, i'd say that you did have an inaccessable boot device.... odd how it worked before.... have you changed the BIOS on the RAID controller??? I guess that might make it want different drivers....
                              The Welsh support two teams when it comes to rugby. Wales of course, and anyone else playing England

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