Random Vista freezes

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mike
  • Start date Start date
M

Mike

Hello,

I recently purchased a HP a6200n which works relatively well. The only
complaint is that frequently (at least once daily) the system will lock
up. When this occurs the only way out is to hold the power button down
and reboot.

When the system locks, the screen will actually freeze the contents and
make it appear somewhat 'snowy'. This happened on a factory system OUT
OF THE BOX. So I know this wasn't due to application software I loaded
on top and I doubt very much it was a virus the system picked up.

Since this started I have done a full virus scan and also have reviewed
the event logs after each fail and nothing in there is obvious. There's
an 'unexpected reboot' message there from my forced power down.

I've gone to nVidia to download the latest nForce 430 drivers which has
not helped. It seems ahead of what MS is pushing as the version I have
is dated 12/07 and the auto updates are telling me to pick up a 7/07
version.

I've also loaded SP1 and all of the HP/MS updates a person can handle.
Has anyone experienced this or have any suggestions on what might be the
next thing to look at?

Thanks!
 
Hi,

The hardware. A new system that freezes "out of the box" should be returned
as defective to the manufacturer. It could the memory, the motherboard, the
power supply, the processor, or anything else, but that's immaterial - it
needs to be sent back for warranty replacement.

--
Best of Luck,

Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP

Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
 
Mike said:
Hello,

I recently purchased a HP a6200n which works relatively well. The only
complaint is that frequently (at least once daily) the system will lock
up. When this occurs the only way out is to hold the power button down
and reboot.

When the system locks, the screen will actually freeze the contents and
make it appear somewhat 'snowy'. This happened on a factory system OUT
OF THE BOX. So I know this wasn't due to application software I loaded
on top and I doubt very much it was a virus the system picked up.

Since this started I have done a full virus scan and also have reviewed
the event logs after each fail and nothing in there is obvious. There's
an 'unexpected reboot' message there from my forced power down.

I've gone to nVidia to download the latest nForce 430 drivers which has
not helped. It seems ahead of what MS is pushing as the version I have
is dated 12/07 and the auto updates are telling me to pick up a 7/07
version.

I've also loaded SP1 and all of the HP/MS updates a person can handle.
Has anyone experienced this or have any suggestions on what might be the
next thing to look at?

Thanks!

Reformat Your Computer And Install Open Source Linux Ubuntu 7.10 RTW,
Just FYI.
 
Rick Rogers said:
Hi,

The hardware. A new system that freezes "out of the box" should be
returned as defective to the manufacturer. It could the memory, the
motherboard, the power supply, the processor, or anything else, but that's
immaterial - it needs to be sent back for warranty replacement.

It is unlikely hardware if it freezes, then continuers with warning or a
"blue" screen, but yes, return it. If the OS isn't matched to the hardware,
it is defective.
 
Brian88135 said:
Hi

Before you send it back or call the service people

I've had my PC about 5 weeks, its an Acer (see spec's below) I had the
exact same problem you are experiencing, I did a restore right back to
(out of the box) defaults.

About where I am. Like the hardware but the software sucks.
Get rid of any Norton Anti virus (or similar) apps as it causes many
problems with Vista and download the free AVG Anti Virus (google it)
which is compatable with Vista 64bit systems

First thing I did was hit the control pannel and remove all the crap,
including Nortion, trial ware including Word, the usual cleanup.
Do your updates (again) and then put SP1 in, that made a HUGE
difference for me,

Did in some respects for me, namely network speed and disk to disk copy.
Both improved some. But bugs do remain. SP2 is assured.
Keep in mind, when you do your restore to defaults, let it go for
awhile after its done restoring back to defaults, in other words, if the
hard drive is still working, let it finish installing whatever its
installing, then once it settles down, reboot it again, then install
your antivirus and programs

Snoop around in the Tutorials on this site for performance and stuff
that will make your box run smoother\faster

If you do all of the above, give us an update on how its working for
you

With all the snooping and googling, I can't help think the Linux camp is
right. I can google Linux just as easy as Vista. I PAY to have Vista and I
expect a little better quality or something, or it becomes mute. Let me
ask, why the hell should I run Vista? Please skip the FUD and BS when
answering, it is getting dry. As an advanced user, Vista is a problem
child.
 
Mike said:
Hello,

I recently purchased a HP a6200n which works relatively well. The only
complaint is that frequently (at least once daily) the system will lock
up. When this occurs the only way out is to hold the power button down
and reboot.

When the system locks, the screen will actually freeze the contents and
make it appear somewhat 'snowy'. This happened on a factory system OUT OF
THE BOX. So I know this wasn't due to application software I loaded on
top and I doubt very much it was a virus the system picked up.

Since this started I have done a full virus scan and also have reviewed
the event logs after each fail and nothing in there is obvious. There's
an 'unexpected reboot' message there from my forced power down.

I've gone to nVidia to download the latest nForce 430 drivers which has
not helped. It seems ahead of what MS is pushing as the version I have is
dated 12/07 and the auto updates are telling me to pick up a 7/07 version.

I've also loaded SP1 and all of the HP/MS updates a person can handle. Has
anyone experienced this or have any suggestions on what might be the next
thing to look at?

Thanks!

Too new to fool around with--send it back for a replacement. Let the vendor
have the headache of finding out what's wrong. I got a replacement Dell
when the on-line rep couldn't come up with a fix for the problem I was
experiencing. His comment "too new to start replacing parts, we'll send put
an exchange." Had it within 2 days--no more problems.
MLD
 
If I purchase a new car and it doesn't run correctly, I don't mess around
with troubleshooting possible causes. I bring it back to the dealer to have
the problems addressed.

If I buy a new TV and the picture doesn't display correctly or the sound
doesn't work, I bring it back to the store for exchange or refund.

Why should anyone spend their time diagnosing an problematic new machine out
of the box? I certainly wouldn't. When I buy a laptop, it better work
correctly on the first power up or it goes right back to where I got it. If
they tell me to call the manufacturer for assistance, I pull out my cell
phone and call my credit card company right then and there and have payment
withheld. My experience has been that this will get the store manager's
attention very quickly, especially if other customers are within earshot.

--
Best of Luck,

Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP

Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
 
Mike,

I also have the problems you are experiencing. My mouse freezes
all the time, screen also freezes, it takes forever to log-on and when you
click the mouse button, it takes forever for the the next item to show.
I hope you find a fix. I myself tried all kinds of things but no luck.
My daughter told me to remove the Vista program and run my XP program
since it was working perfectly before.

Roy
 
Sam said:
Apparently one of the things that Vista does after it is installed is
to index all of the files on all of the hard drives. It does this
without telling you its doing it. I've had Ultimate x64 installed for
about 4 days and have been having terrible hangs and waits when
starting Media Center. So finally I let it sit in a hung state. After
a coupleof hours everything started working again and Media Center
now comes up without the wait time. When I go back to XP I can see
all the index files that Vista created in my media folders.

I just shut off the indexing right off, it's useless to me
Clark...
 
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