
paulgir at gmail
Jun 23, 2012, 9:38 PM
Post #7 of 18
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Re: Looks like my system drive is faulty - ideas?
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On Sun, 24 Jun 2012 16:34:29 +1200, Stephen Worthington <stephen_agent [at] jsw> wrote: > On Sun, 24 Jun 2012 15:19:36 +1200, you wrote: > >> On 24/06/2012, at 2:59 PM, Stephen Worthington >> <stephen_agent [at] jsw> wrote: >> >>> On Sun, 24 Jun 2012 13:55:42 +1200 (NZST), you wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> On Sun, June 24, 2012 1:31 pm, David Moore wrote: >>>>> My system won't boot today unless I unplug the boot drive. Can't even >>>>> get into the BIOS setup. Just hangs with no POST beeps/messages and >>>>> the >>>>> hdd led permanently on. So I can't boot into a cd to try and >>>>> diagnose/repair the drive. I can boot a cd if I disconnect the boot >>>>> hdd.. >>>>> Any ideas how I can get round this so I can try and fix the boot >>>>> drive? >>>> >>>> Is it IDE or SATA? >>>> >>>> If its sata an option might be an external USB -> SATA adapter so you >>>> can >>>> try to access the drive on another system that has already booted. >>>> >>>> Steve >>> >>> SATA is normally hotswap, so you can unplug the drive, boot from CD >>> and then plug it in and see what happens. But if it is preventing the >>> system from booting into BIOS, then it is likely pulling down the >>> power supply, so plugging it in may just shut the PC down again. I >>> would recommend unplugging as much of your PC as you can when trying >>> things that are killing the power supply. >>> >> Didn't know that. Thanks. Pulled the SATA lead and boot goes as normal >> up to the point that my bootable (I thought) cd didn't. So it's not a >> power problem at least. Must be something hanging the SATA controller. > > Lots of possibilities at that point. First, I think you need a "known > good" bootable CD - is there another PC you can try booting yours in, > just to make sure? A laptop? > > Once you have a bootable CD, if it still does not boot in the MythTV > box, I have found that sometimes the CMOS BIOS settings can go astray > for no known reason, so try using the clear CMOS jumper on the > motherboard and setting everything up again. Even if the settings > seem valid in the BIOS screens, there can still be something bad > requiring a full clear of the entire CMOS RAM. And I would make sure > that anything that can be unplugged from the PC is - basically > everything except the CD drive and the video card. > > It could still be a power problem too - I have seen situations where > the 12 V was the problem, and had gone faulty a while ago. But hard > drives will typically still work without proper 12 V power while they > are still rotating. They draw on the 5 V electronics rail through > their circuit board, getting enough power to the drive motor to keep > it rotating and the heads working just fine. But they are unable to > start up without proper 12 V, so everything seems fine until the next > reboot. So swapping in another power supply if you have access to a > suitable one would be a good thing to try at some point. Failing that > or a power supply tester, if you have a multimeter, find one of the > Molex connectors for IDE drives and check the voltages on them. > > _______________________________________________ > mythtvnz mailing list > mythtvnz [at] lists > http://lists.ourshack.com/mailman/listinfo/mythtvnz > Archives http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/mythtvnz/ A know reason for CMOS settings to go awry is a dying CMOS back up battery. I had to replace one this week. -Paul _______________________________________________ mythtvnz mailing list mythtvnz [at] lists http://lists.ourshack.com/mailman/listinfo/mythtvnz Archives http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/mythtvnz/
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