Hard Drive Problem
telecomops101
Member Posts: 128
in Off-Topic
Computer is booting very slow then goes to BSD. The hard drive also shows no letter designation the C: drive. Any suggestions
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Comments
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sthomas Member Posts: 1,240 ■■■□□□□□□□Try unplugging the Harddrive then plugging it back it again, also try booting to Win XP CD (if that is the OS installed on the drive) and do a CHKDSK. You could also try booting to the XP CD and doing a repair on the OS or format the drive and reinstall the OS if the other stuff does not work, but it sounds to me like the drive is bad.Working on: MCSA 2012 R2
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davenport Member Posts: 86 ■■□□□□□□□□telecomops101 wrote:Computer is booting very slow then goes to BSD. The hard drive also shows no letter designation the C: drive. Any suggestions
Then goes to BSD? If you're talking about BSD as in a /nix operating system there isn't a "C:" drive. If I was you and you are looking into a /nix machine, I would do some more reading on unix/linux and mount points. C: drive is a thing of the Microsoft world.
If not, I totally misunderstood your question and I apologize. -
JDMurray Admin Posts: 13,089 AdminBSD = Blue Screen of Death, which is definitely a Windows thing.
This is usually an indication of a hardware problem, possibly involving a bad or damaged driver, a hardware subsystem or peripheral that is malfunctioning, or a cable connector that isn't fitted properly or is shorting out. The first thing to note is what changes were made to the computer prior to this error condition occurring. Also check the BSD error message to see if it points to a specific driver file or device.
If there have been no recent changes to the computer's hardware or software, it could be that the computer's hard drive or disk controller is (going) bad. Swap out the hard drive with a known good hard drive and see if the same problem occurs. -
Slowhand Mod Posts: 5,161 ModHell, if it happens before the OS loads, it's an IBM thing. (Those machine-BSD's are a little scarier than anything Windows ever threw out.) As mentioned, there is a good chance there is a hardware problem, and you should start troubleshooting the physical computer, particularly the hard drive.
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davenport Member Posts: 86 ■■□□□□□□□□GOTCHA! I thought he was talking about FreeBSD. That's why I was wondering what he was smoking about a C:\ drive. lol
Move along, nothing to see here. -
blargoe Member Posts: 4,174 ■■■■■■■■■□In his defense the more common acronym for this is BSOD. I can understand the confusion.IT guy since 12/00
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ally_uk Member Posts: 1,145 ■■■■□□□□□□Yeah I thought he was talking about UNIX at first i was like wtf lol
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