Windows xp home not booting
Even tried a disk copy iso with various tools and many partition tools. I have been working this problem since July But for all others with this issue I two things for you to consider:. This will check the hardware integrity and HDD errors — and fix them! So what? This 5 month ordeal has ended for me — unsolved and I hate not resolving problems. I hope to gather all useful thing learned, boil them down to 1 page to pass along.
For now, I need a break! Window xp stop working. Comments violating those rules will be removed. Comments that don't add value will be removed, including off-topic or content-free comments, or comments that look even a little bit like spam. All comments containing links and certain keywords will be moderated before publication. I want comments to be valuable for everyone, including those who come later and take the time to read.
Search Ask Leo! Do this Subscribe to Confident Computing! I'll see you there! Please help! If the HDD light is still flashing, chkdsk is doing something so don't interrupt it. It will finish eventually one way or the other. Keep an eye on the percentage amount to be sure it is still making progress. It may even appear to go backwards sometimes. My XP Home Edition won't boot. It crashed the other day and seems to have eaten its System file.
Trying to come up with a non-destructive repair option, so I don't have to reload all my apps, which is what will happen if I run the "standard" Recovery. Have full backup, but not recent enough. Hardware tests good. Ran comprehensive disk test from bios utility and it passed. Seagate's backup utility works, booted from a cd. Ran a full backup of the crashed disk. A couple dozen files got corrupted somewhere in the process, but everything else is good.
Once upon a time, I seem to remember you could rerun SP3 to fix a lot of problems. Have SP3 on a disk, but it's not bootable. Not sure how to mount the disk after booting from the CD, though. I've run backups with it before, too. There's a file utility that comes with Bart-PE and it can't open the drive, either. So, I have no idea what's going on, really. Messed up boot sector? Partition table can't be too messed up, because the recovery partition is fine.
Even if I had an original Setup disk, that'd be so old I don't know if it would be that much help. In some cases your files may be lost. If that is the case, you may want to connect your hard drive to another computer to copy off any files you don't want to loose. Verify there are no hardware problems preventing the computer from booting up. Open the computer case by removing the screws holding the left computer door in place.
Tighten any computer hardware that was recently altered. To create a Windows startup disk, insert a floppy disk into the drive of a similarly configured, working Windows XP system, launch My Computer, right-click the floppy disk icon, and select the Format command from the context menu.
When you see the Format dialog box, leave all the default settings as they are and click the Start button. Once the format operation is complete, close the Format dialog box to return to My Computer, double-click the drive C icon to access the root directory, and copy the following three files to the floppy disk:. After you create the Windows startup disk, insert it into the floppy drive on the afflicted system and press [Ctrl][Alt][Delete] to reboot the computer.
When you boot from the Windows startup disk, the computer will bypass the active partition and boot files on the hard disk and attempt to start Windows XP normally. You can also try to boot the operating system with the Last Known Good Configuration feature. This feature will allow you to undo any changes that caused problems in the CurrentControlSet registry key, which defines hardware and driver settings.
The Last Known Good Configuration feature replaces the contents of the CurrentControlSet registry key with a backup copy that was last used to successfully start up the operating system.
When you see the message Please select the operating system to start or hear the single beep, press [F8] to display the Windows Advanced Options menu. Keep in mind that you get only one shot with the Last Known Good Configuration feature. In other words, if it fails to revive your Windows XP on the first attempt, the backup copy is also corrupt. System Restore runs in the background as a service and continually monitors system-critical components for changes.
When it detects an impending change, System Restore immediately makes backup copies, called restore points, of these critical components before the change occurs. In addition, System Restore is configured by default to create restore points every 24 hours. Now, select the Safe Mode item from the menu and press [Enter].
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