by Skouperd » Tue Apr 06, 2010 6:21 pm
Interesting problem, can you just give me some details around the following:
1. The HDD, is it SATA or is it IDE? (I assume this is SATA)
2. The DVD, is it SATA or is it IDE? (I assume this is IDE?)
3. Please provide the history of the HDD, what was installed on it previously? Was it a dynamic disk or a basic disk?
4. You say you are trying to install Windows XP. Now can you please provide me with a lot more information on this one, especially with regard to which version and what service packs is included in it.
I have found previously, thinking back many moons ago, that Windows did not like SATA drives, and drives bigger than 128GB also presented a different issue. This was solved with SP1 (or was it SP2?). I have found that some dynamic / basic disks causes issues when trying to install a new drive. My suggestion, convert to a basic disk, format the drive completely, and redo.
The first thought that I had when reading your message was your boot sequence is screwed up. Obviously you've checked that.
Oh, any possibility that you could perhaps change the RAM, or install it with just a single stick? Remember, when windows restart, it actually loads up the real GUI for the first time.
Good luck
Interesting problem, can you just give me some details around the following:
1. The HDD, is it SATA or is it IDE? (I assume this is SATA)
2. The DVD, is it SATA or is it IDE? (I assume this is IDE?)
3. Please provide the history of the HDD, what was installed on it previously? Was it a dynamic disk or a basic disk?
4. You say you are trying to install Windows XP. Now can you please provide me with a lot more information on this one, especially with regard to which version and what service packs is included in it.
I have found previously, thinking back many moons ago, that Windows did not like SATA drives, and drives bigger than 128GB also presented a different issue. This was solved with SP1 (or was it SP2?). I have found that some dynamic / basic disks causes issues when trying to install a new drive. My suggestion, convert to a basic disk, format the drive completely, and redo.
The first thought that I had when reading your message was your boot sequence is screwed up. Obviously you've checked that.
Oh, any possibility that you could perhaps change the RAM, or install it with just a single stick? Remember, when windows restart, it actually loads up the real GUI for the first time.
Good luck