help

C

Corbin

my computer started rebooting yesterday.....
i look in the event viewer under system and find the following errors
before reboot:

The device, \device\ide\ideport0, did not respond within the timeout period.

The driver detected a controller error on \device\ide\ideport0.

and this warning:

An error was detected on device \device\harddisk0\d during the paging
operation.

I built this computer about 14 months ago, no changes have been made in well
over a month.

the errors sound like harddrive to me, but i'm not sure.

little help please
 
T

T. Waters

Save all your important files and then run a disk diagnostic.
Diagnostic can be obtained at the website of your HD manufacturer, or try
SeaTools, from Seagate, which tests any make of drive. You can even do an
online diagnostic with Seatools, no download necessary.
http://www.seagate.com/support/seatools/
 
M

Malke

Corbin said:
my computer started rebooting yesterday.....
i look in the event viewer under system and find the following errors
before reboot:

The device, \device\ide\ideport0, did not respond within the timeout
period.

The driver detected a controller error on \device\ide\ideport0.

and this warning:

An error was detected on device \device\harddisk0\d during the paging
operation.

I built this computer about 14 months ago, no changes have been made
in well over a month.

the errors sound like harddrive to me, but i'm not sure.

little help please

For future reference, next time you post use a more descriptive subject
line.

It does sound like hardware problems to me. Here are some general
hardware troubleshooting steps:

1) Open the computer and run it open, cleaning out all dust bunnies and
observing all fans (overheating will cause system freezing). Obviously
you can't do this with a laptop, but you can hear if the fan is running
and feel if the laptop is getting too hot.

2) Test the RAM - I like Memtest86+ from www.memtest.org. Obviously, you
have to get the program from a working machine. You will either
download the precompiled Windows binary to make a bootable floppy or
the .iso to make a bootable cd. If you want to use the latter, you'll
need to have third-party burning software on the machine where you
download the file - XP's built-in burning capability won't do the job.
In either case, boot with the media you made. The test will run
immediately. Let the test run for an extended period of time - unless
errors are seen immediately. If you get any errors, replace the RAM.

3) Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility from the mftr. Usually
you will download the file and make a bootable floppy with it. Boot
with the media and do a thorough test. If the drive has physical
errors, replace it.

4) The power supply may be going bad or be inadequate for the devices
you have in the system. The adequacy issue doesn't really apply to a
laptop, although of course the power
supply can be faulty.

5) Test the motherboard with something like TuffTest from
www.tufftest.com. Sometimes this is useful, and sometimes it isn't.

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 good local
computer repair shop (not a CompUSA or Best Buy type of store).

Malke
 
P

PCorbin

i got a RAW read error when running the smart test using the diagnostic
utility from W/D.
ran the extended test and all passed fine.
running the memtest now.
not sure what actually the raw read error means.
is it physical or software that cases this error?
 

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