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Repeated Reboots

Discussion in 'Windows XP' started by dbdave, 2006/07/20.

  1. 2006/07/20
    dbdave

    dbdave Inactive Thread Starter

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    I have had a spate of reboots with no warnings.

    I've done some reading here and abouts and everything told me that it was a ram fault. I ran windows memory tester and yes, it reported the 1 512k stick was faulty. I replaced it with 2 512k match pair ddr sticks and all seemed good for 2 days. We then had a power cut and since then, I've had 3 reboots in the past 2 hours.
    I've checked the system temperatures and they all appear ok CPU at 45 case 35 with CPU under 100% load running the United Devices cancer agent.

    Links:

    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/1.txt
    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/2.txt
    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/3.txt
    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/4.txt

    memory changed here

    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/5.txt
    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/6.txt
    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/7.txt
    http://www.dhost.co.uk/debug/8.txt


    ( I would have attached them but I'm unable to )

    Any help gratefully received as I'm pulling my hair out..

    System specs:

    AMD XP2600+ running straight - not overclocked
    MSI K7N2G motherboard.
    500W PSU
    1 gig Kingston PC2700 ddr memory ( was 512k ddr to start) - running at double rate.
    2 x Western Digital 7200 80 gig H/drives
    1 x LG CD drive.
    Nvidia FX5200 graphics cards
    Netgear WG311t wireless network card.
    modem blaster 56k modem - not connected.
     
    Last edited: 2006/07/20
  2. 2006/07/20
    Arie

    Arie Administrator Administrator Staff

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    Errors in all different places usually point to hardware.

    Probably the best thing to do is to go to Microsoft Support Services, and select an option to "open" a support request.

    You can use the log file (debuglog.txt) generated to supply the needed information to start your support request.
     
    Arie,
    #2

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  4. 2006/07/21
    rsinfo

    rsinfo SuperGeek Alumni

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    Are you using any sort of power protection device (UPS/CVT etc.) as random reboots can be due to voltage fluctuations. Also check out your SMPS - it could have developed some problem due to voltage fluctuation/cut.

    Also check your RAM and run chkdsk on hard disk.
     
  5. 2006/07/21
    dbdave

    dbdave Inactive Thread Starter

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    No, I haven't got any form of UPS backup running. SMPS?

    I've run memtest on the ram for about 8 hours (overnight) and it came back as ok. I will do a chkdsk on the hard disks though as I haven't done one for a while.

    Thanks for the advice.
     

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