"operaflute" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:9D1ADD0B-AF2E-4E32-9704-(E-Mail Removed)...
> I've got XP Pro on my Dell Inspiron 8600 (SP 2 but same problem after I
> got
> SP3)
>
> I upgraded the hard drive with a 160GB Western Digital Scorpio Drive in
> November 2007. All sources called it compatible and all had been well
> until
> now.
> New RAM card a month ago - again confirmed compatible, and, to date, not
> implicated.
>
> Problem: after shutting down, computer will not reboot. After the Dell
> splash screen, I get a black screen with a blinking cursor and I can not
> type.
>
> Quick diagnostics give me the error:
> DST Short Test Fail
> Error 1000-0142
> Unit 4: Drive Self Test Failed Status byte 79
>
> Repeats of the above test now tell me:
>
> DST Short Test Fail
> Error Code: 1000-0146
> Msg: Unit 0: DST Log contains previous error(s)
>
>
> Google tells me the hard disk is probably dying.
>
> I run the longer Dell Diagnostic Tests on the hard drive and all tests
> pass!
> (listed below).
>
> IDE Disk:
> Device Self Test
> Seek test
> S.M.A.R.T. Test
> Verify Test
> Confidence Test
>
>
> I can not boot into safe mode (I'm trying to use F8 to do so.)
>
> I WAS able to restore everything with my back up (which I've done 2 or 3
> times in the past week) but as soon as I shut down, I can't reboot and I
> have
> to restore all over again. But as of today, even that won't work.
>
> Using the XP CD chkdsk C: /p /r tells me "chkdsk found and fixed one or
> more
> errors on the volume" but still same problem.
> MBRFIX - no help
> I tried the western digital diagnostic utility but it will not boot from
> the
> western dig CD
>
> I'm currently trying to restore again after chkdsk procedure. If it
> doesn't
> go, I'll try restoring with an older image. IF no go, I'll reinstall XP
> with
> the CD (old! SP!) and see what I get.
>
> This started last week when I still had SP2. SInce then the SP3 came out,
> but no change.
> I did for a short time have the WINOFF program installed, but got rid of
> it
> since it was my initial suspect. Sorry can't get the link without losing
> this message... stupid cafe computer!
>
> Help!
Disconnect the drive and see if you can boot into the XP Setup CD. You
should be able to get to the point where Setup looks for drives to install
to, then it will give up. At this point, you can be reasonably sure that
(most of) the rest of the hardware is still good.
If the drive is failing, there is less than no point in attempting to
reinstall to it. You should put in a new drive before this one fails
*entirely*. Failing drives have time-limited life spans, and it's better
to use that time for data recovery. Remove the old drive, put in a new
drive, install XP to it, and when done reattach the old drive and copy your
data back into place.
Installing to a new drive will also help you determine if the old drive is
failing or not. If the problem persists, it isn't the drive. If it goes
away, it was the drive.
HTH
-pk
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