Hi, Brad - and others.
This sounds like the old 0x7B INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE error that I first
saw back in the year 2000 when I was trying to install Windows 2000 onto my
SCSI hard drive. And later when trying to move to SATA drives.
The Windows setup disk (whether Win2K, WinXP or Vista, and whether CD or
DVD) has enough "smarts" to use an "exotic" hard drive, but NOT enough to
BOOT FROM such drive. So Setup goes through all the early steps of
partitioning and formatting the hard drive (if necessary) and then copying
all those thousands of files to it. Then it does a little housekeeping and
prepares to actually BOOT FROM that hard drive - for the first time. (The
current boot was from the DVD, remember, not from that hard drive.)
And that's when things come to a screeching halt! The computer can't boot
from that hard drive until the proper drivers have been installed and
incorporated into the startup files on the boot device - which is now the
hard drive and not the DVD. If you switch the BIOS to boot from the DVD, it
will boot, but you're back where you started. There's nothing wrong with
the computer or the DVD - or even the hard drive, except that it does not
have the necessary drivers in place.
The Vista DVD has drivers for a LOT of drives, but not every hard drive out
there. And some BIOSes don't support very new, very old or some exotic
drives. Your WD SATA drive might be one of them. To BOOT FROM that drive,
you need to first be sure your BIOS supports it (your new mobo certainly
should) and that you have the proper Vista drivers for it. If they are not
on the Vista DVD, then you will need to get them from WD and have them ready
when running Vista Setup.
In Win2K and WinXP, we had to get the drivers from the drive makers, put
them onto a floppy (no other media would work), and press <F6> early in
Setup to be able to install them from the floppy at the proper time. The
process is different in Vista, but support for my drives is on the DVD so I
haven't had to deal with the new method and I'm not very familiar with it.
Just have your WD drivers disk handy and watch for the prompt when it gets
to "Where do you want to install Vista" and follow the instructions.
RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
Microsoft Windows MVP
(Running Windows Live Mail 2008 in Vista Ultimate x64)
"Brad Dodson" <> wrote in message
news:8A0E3B67-F508-4077-82AD-...
> I'm trying to install vista on the new computer I just built, and the
> install
> always fails after the first reboot. It gets stuck in some kind of
> infinite
> loop where it seems to have some kind of hard drive and cd activity (these
> are the only two drives) every second or so. I've left it in this state
> for
> hours, and sometimes it eventually reboots. Either way, if I reboot it, it
> starts up into Vista and goes into the "Completing Installation" phase.
> It just unexpectedly reboots during this point (it doesn't show the your
> computer is about to reboot screen), and when it starts back up the only
> option is to roll-back the setup back to XP.
> I first tried doing a clean install from the dvd (which is a burn since
> that's all i can get from our volume license), but couldn't get that to
> work,
> and then i installed xp on the machine so I could mount the iso and
> install
> from that. Neither works. I've tried every bios setting I can think of,
> but
> the install never works.
> I've tried installing both the 32-bit and 64-bit versions and both do the
> same thing. I don't think it's a hardware issue since I've been able to
> run
> XP on it and it seems completely stable.
> Hardware Specs are:
> Intel Core2Quad Q6600
> 2 GB Crucial Ballistix PC6400 4-4-4-12
> Gigabyte P35-DS3R Mainboard
> nVidia e-GeForce 8500 GT
> Western Digital Caviar 500GB SATA
> An old DVD/CD-RRW IDE
> Floppy Drive
>
> Vista Upgrade Advisor sees no problems, and the compatibility check only
> lists issues with the SATA RAID driver (I'm not using RAID).
>
> I'm at my wits end to figure out what's going on. If I can't get it
> working
> soon, I'll probably return the motherboard and get a new one, but I'd
> prefer
> to just have things work.
>
> I'll probably try flashing the bios and also removing the cd drive
> (unnecessary when installing off image), any other ideas?