Windows won't boot

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Guest

I had a mother board failure and transferred the CPU and HD from the dead box
to a new one. Windows (Home) is failing to boot now. Can someone please tell
me what the trouble might be?
 
Nemo said:
I had a mother board failure and transferred the CPU and HD from the dead box
to a new one. Windows (Home) is failing to boot now. Can someone please tell
me what the trouble might be?


Normally, and assuming a retail license (many factory-installed OEM
installations are BIOS-locked to a specific chipset and therefore are
*not* transferable to a new motherboard - check yours before starting),
unless the new motherboard is virtually identical (same chipset, same
IDE controllers, same BIOS version, etc.) to the one on which the WinXP
installation was originally performed, you'll need to perform a repair
(a.k.a. in-place upgrade) installation, at the very least:

How to Perform an In-Place Upgrade of Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/directory/article.asp?ID=KB;EN-US;Q315341

Changing a Motherboard or Moving a Hard Drive with WinXP Installed
http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/moving_xp.html

The "why" is quite simple, really, and has nothing to do with
licensing issues, per se; it's a purely technical matter, at this point.
You've pulled the proverbial hardware rug out from under the OS. (If
you don't like -- or get -- the rug analogy, think of it as picking up a
Cape Cod style home and then setting it down onto a Ranch style
foundation. It just isn't going to fit.) WinXP, like Win2K before it,
is not nearly as "promiscuous" as Win9x when it comes to accepting any
old hardware configuration you throw at it. On installation it
"tailors" itself to the specific hardware found. This is one of the
reasons that the entire WinNT/2K/XP OS family is so much more stable
than the Win9x group.

As always when undertaking such a significant change, back up any
important data before starting.

This will also probably require re-activation, unless you have a
Volume Licensed version of WinXP Pro installed. If it's been more than
120 days since you last activated that specific Product Key, you'll most
likely be able to activate via the Internet without problem. If it's
been less, you might have to make a 5 minute phone call.


--

Bruce Chambers

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safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin

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Fails how - a Blue Screen of Death ? - sometimes it is due to a change in
Chipset drivers & most likely the Mass Storage Controller (IDE, SATA).
A repair or In-Place install of XP should apply the correct drivers. If you
have an XP-CD ROM just set the boot sequence to CD before HD and
follow steps until you reach the prompt to "Repair an existing XP
installation".
When booting from the CD-ROM watch for the prompt "Press Any key
to boot from CD-ROM" which should start the installation process.
 
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