Re: STOP error: 0x24 (0x190203, 0x865462B8, 0xC102, 0x0)
- From: "Gerry Cornell" <gcjc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 21 Dec 2006 09:44:05 -0000
This link adds some extra suggestions to those provided by Rock.
Not all are easy to try by a less experienced user. Posting copies
of Event Viewer Reports could make it easier to help.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/DevTest_g/hh/DevTest_g/t05_bugs_60_299217d6-98d1-4d1d-8068-883e89933845.xml.asp
if link broken try
http://snipurl.com/l6o7
You can access Event Viewer by selecting Start, Administrative Tools,
Event Viewer. When researching the meaning of the error, information
regarding Event ID, Source and Description are important.
HOW TO: View and Manage Event Logs in Event Viewer in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;308427&Product=winxp
A tip for posting copies of Error Reports! Run Event Viewer and double
click on the error you want to copy. In the window, which appears is a
button resembling two pages. Click the button and close Event
Viewer. Now start your message (email) and do a paste into the body of
the message. This will paste the info from the Event Viewer Error Report
into the message. Make sure this is the first paste after exiting from
Event
Viewer.
--
Hope this helps.
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Rock" <rock@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Oml7qnLJHHA.3668@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"helpless BSoD victim" wrote
"A problem has been detected and windows has been shut down"
"Disable or uninstall any anti-virus, disk defrag, or backup
utilities.
CHeck your hard drive config, etc. Run CHKDSK /F to check for hard
drive
corruption, and then restart your computer"
"STOP error: 0x24 (0x190203, 0x865462B8, 0xC102, 0x0)"
I get this message EVERY time I try to boot my computer. It gives me
all the
options too:
Safe Mode
Last Known Good Config
Start Normally
NONE of them work...they go for like 2 seconds...then it gives me the
BSoD
again and again to no avail...very annoying.
It happened right after I decided to shut off my computer during a
"disk-error checking" session (i told it to run while I was ON
windows..I
left-clicked my hard drive and did the whole shebang and told it run
the next
time windows booted)...it was taking a rather long time and I decided
to just
turn it off, since I figured it didn't mind. When I came back a few
minutes
later to turn it on, it gave me the BSoD. I was like "wtf...I did
nothing to
provoke this..."
Overall..i'm very confused, and I'm not sure what could provoke
this...I
mean, I have Norton Antivirus running...but I doubt that is the
problem cause
I got it a month ago and it hasn't given me this sort of problem.
http://aumha.org/win5/kbestop.htm
0x00000024: NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM
It's not a good idea to just turn off the computer, let alone while in
the middle of something as risky as running chkdsk. As the link above
indicates this is a problem with the file system of the drive.
Hopefully you have a full and complete backup of important data just
in case. You should always have this and never run chkdsk without
having a full backup.
If you don't have a backup put the drive in another XP computer. If
it can see the data make a copy, then run chkdsk /r on it.
If you have a backup try running chkdsk from the recovery console to
see if that will help. Boot from the XP installation CD, take the
first R for repair. Type in the number for the Windows installation,
normally 1, and then enter the password for the built in Administrator
account. You didn't say if the OS is Home or Pro. For Home this
password is normally blank so press enter. If Pro enter the password
assigned to this account.
At the command prompt do chkdsk /r and let it complete. See if it
will boot now.
.
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