what are you friggin' crazy ?Esco! said:I think at this point it may be smart to take it into the shop.
Try to get an estimate before they fix it though
Esco! said:I think at this point it may be smart to take it into the shop.
Enough Said!!Keebler Elf said:I think I've run out of troubleshooting juice so I'm just going to take it into the shop and let them figure out WTF is wrong.
NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WTF are you trying to accomplish by plugging the hardware in again FFS??????????????Keebler Elf said:. So I turned the system off, plugged everything back in (hard drives, adaptor cards, printer, etc.), turned the system on, and it crashed.
So I turned off, unplugged everything but the primary drive, turned on, and it works again. So it looks like there's possibly a problem with the adaptor cards, the printer, or one of the hard drives.
McAfee is long gone so that's not the problem.
I think I've run out of troubleshooting juice so I'm just going to take it into the shop and let them figure out WTF is wrong.
p.s. in order to update drivers, do I need the hardware plugged in?
why would you continue to update drivers if the drivers you have work ? don't update unless it's broken.Keebler Elf said:So, just out of curiousity, if I were to continue using the controller card, how would I go about installing updated drivers for it if everytime I connect the drive it causes Windows to crash?
And one final question: as part of my troubleshooting, I did a Windows Repair with the Windows CD. Should I be worried about that? I seem to recall reading that it's better to do a complete reinstall rather than try a Repair but, as it turns out, there probably wasn't anything wrong with Windows to begin with.
Because I've unplugged the adaptor card and if the driver problem is with the card, then I can't use it in future unless the drivers are updated. Currently I'm not planning on using it, but if I need to in future I'll have to update the drivers.joebear said:why would you continue to update drivers if the drivers you have work ?
What you can do is download the drivers and keep them on a floppy disc in case you ever need them. DON'T load them onto your pc if you don't need them. (probably will cause conflicts if windows loads drivers for a piece of hardware that isn't there).Keebler Elf said:Because I've unplugged the adaptor card and if the driver problem is with the card, then I can't use it in future unless the drivers are updated. Currently I'm not planning on using it, but if I need to in future I'll have to update the drivers.
What do you mean? It does. The card is for an extra hard drive (i.e., there are already 2 IDE drives plugged into the MB and the card allows for additional expansions).tboy said:Anyway, Keeb, I'm REALLY surprised your mobo doesn't support IDE inboard.
Ok sorry, I missed where you said you already had two IDE's plugged in. I thought you only had the sata plugged in for a good boot. Didn't realize you were running, what? 12 drives? 32? lolKeebler Elf said:What do you mean? It does. The card is for an extra hard drive (i.e., there are already 2 IDE drives plugged into the MB and the card allows for additional expansions).
What good is having the drivers on disk if everytime I hook up the card it causes Windows to crash? I'll never get a chance to install them...





