Lee Lord wrote:
> I recently began having a problem when booting up my Gateway Computer
> running
> Vista SP1 which I installed months ago. The OS along with all the loading
> programs get to a certain point (but at a different point each time) after
> the desktop is loaded. The HDD light stops flickering long before is
> usually
> does and all is frozen. I can't access anything with my mouse or the
> touchpad. I have to do a Hard shutdown. Upon rebooting sometimes
> everything loads completely and sometimes it does not.
>
> This started slowly a few weeks ago but has gotten progressively worse. I
> haven't installed any new programs recenty nor updated drivers. I have a
> feeling it may be a virus but no indication other than the freezing. I've
> done system restores and replaced the OS with a Norton Save and Restore
> image
> made a few weeks ago but to no avail. Same problem. I'd hate to do a
> factory system recovery as you all can imagine. Any suggestions as to
> what
> would cause this problem? Thank you.
Since you're still getting the problem with a clean image and since the
problem is random, that's a strong indication of hardware failure. I would
start by testing the hard drive.
Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website. You will create a bootable CD with the file you download.
You will need third-party burning software to do this such as Roxio, Nero,
or the free CDBurnerXP Pro. Burn as an image, not as data.
http://www.cdburnerxp.se/
Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it fails
any physical tests, replace it.
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...ardware_Tshoot
Standard disclaimer: I can't see and test your computer myself, so these are
just suggestions based on many years of being a professional computer tech;
suggestions based on what you've written. You should not take my
suggestions as a definitive diagnosis. Testing hardware failures often
involves swapping out suspected parts with known-good parts. If you can't
do the testing yourself and/or are uncomfortable opening your computer,
take the machine to a professional computer repair shop (not your local
equivalent of BigComputerStore/GeekSquad). If possible, have all your data
backed up before you take the machine into a shop.
Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
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http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ