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Drag to disk crash windows shuts down


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#1 johnfowler

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Posted 02 September 2007 - 05:59 PM

Old Computer but oh well here it is

athlon xp 2200+ 1gig ram 9800 ati vid BENQ dvd burner.
Ok I thought I may of had a power problem so I bought a new power supply 500 watt should do it NOOT!  had 300watt. What happens is when draging files to burn on a DVD mostly larger amounts of files at one time causes computer to restart without a warning. I also checked for over heating problems and are not haveing problems there. It is eaither drag to disk or may be a vid card problem. When I sent in the crash report to MS it says I have a driver problem. any ideas. oh yea I installed the lastest vid card driver.

John

#2 grandpabruce

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Posted 02 September 2007 - 06:43 PM

QUOTE (johnfowler @ Sep 2 2007, 08:59 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Old Computer but oh well here it is

athlon xp 2200+ 1gig ram 9800 ati vid BENQ dvd burner.
Ok I thought I may of had a power problem so I bought a new power supply 500 watt should do it NOOT!  had 300watt. What happens is when draging files to burn on a DVD mostly larger amounts of files at one time causes computer to restart without a warning. I also checked for over heating problems and are not haveing problems there. It is eaither drag to disk or may be a vid card problem. When I sent in the crash report to MS it says I have a driver problem. any ideas. oh yea I installed the lastest vid card driver.

John


I could be a lousy power supply, bad RAM, your 9800 going belly up, or a heatsink/fan stopping.  

What power supply did you get.  If it is a cheap no name power supply, you run the risk of frying components on your motherboard.
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#3 james_hardin

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Posted 03 September 2007 - 02:39 AM

D2D is a packet writer and will eventually result in lose of data…

Give it a try using Classic and see what happens.
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#4 gi7omy

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Posted 03 September 2007 - 04:00 AM

I'd tend to agree with Brendon - in the short term, try going into BIOS and reducing the Front Side Bus speed (your 2200 will run slower, but the RAM won't be as stressed out).

I actually had that problem on a 2200 and that 'fixed' it until I fitted new RAM.

It probably isn't all your RAM btw - maybe one stick is lower rated than the others. The only way to check that is to remove one stick at a time and see if it still does the restart (with the FSB at the original speed) - if it doesn't, that's the faulty stick
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#5 Big_Dave

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Posted 03 September 2007 - 07:52 AM

If you do go into the bios, you might want to select "fast boot off".  This results in a better memory check from what I can remember of this setting.
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