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The worst PC disasters (and how to survive them)

Read our tips then tell us your own worst PC experiences

April 24th | Tell us what you think [ 8 comments ]

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Faulty BIOS settings can cause all kinds of odd boot problems

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You might have spent big money on a great PC, installed only the finest software and spent years learning how to manage it all properly, but the First Rule of Computing still applies: things will go wrong eventually.

Hardware will fail, you'll delete the wrong file or find your system doesn't boot, and that's it – you're facing a major PC disaster. And if you're panicked into the wrong actions, then the situation can rapidly become worse.

We're going to look at common disasters, show you how to recover from them and also recommend software that can help.

My hard drive has died!

PC hardware failure is never good news. But if it's the hard drive then you're looking at a potential disaster, and probably a boot process that goes no further than a very basic BIOS error message.

As long as the drive is spinning though (open the case and listen), there is still hope.

Launch your BIOS set-up program, and check to see if it's recognised the drive. You might find it hasn't because the BIOS settings have changed – maybe it's corrupted due to a failing battery, in which case a quick settings tweak could fix it.

If the BIOS seems okay, but there's a definite drive problem, remove and reconnect any drive cables, ensuring they're making good connections. Try swapping the data cable for another one that you know is working.

It's also possible there's a hard drive controller problem: plug the drive into a different channel and see if there's any change. If you've just added new hardware, or your power supply is failing, there may not be enough watts to run the drive properly.

Unplug some other hardware, remove non-essential expansion cards and try again. Still no luck? If you're not going to pay for professional assistance, there's always the infamous last resort of data recovery: cryogenics.

Start gently, placing the drive in a sealable plastic bag, and another to keep it dry. Then put it in the fridge. Leave it for a couple of hours, then try booting again. If that's no help, move it to the freezer.

The chances of success are slim, and some say this is an urban myth, but plenty of people have reported that it's worked for them, so it has to be worth a try. Just remember, if you do get the drive working again, don't reboot. Get your data off immediately. It could fail again at any moment – you've no time to waste.

Windows won't start!

If the boot process begins but Windows refuses to load, you may have a corrupt or missing start-up file. This is occasionally confirmed with an error message specifying the file (usually NTLDR), but you may just be faced with a blank screen.

You can prepare for this under Windows XP by creating a start-up floppy. Locate the files ‘boot.ini', ‘NTLDR' and ‘Ntdetect.com' in the root folder of your hard drive (click ‘Tools | Folder Options | View', and select ‘Show hidden files and folders' if you can't see them), then copy them onto a blank, newly formatted floppy.

Now, if one of those files is corrupted on the hard drive, you can boot from the floppy instead. If you don't have a start-up floppy, you can do much the same thing from an XP CD.

Boot from the disc, follow the prompts to the ‘Welcome to Setup' screen, and press ‘R' to launch the Recovery Console. Then type the following commands, pressing [Enter] after each (replace ‘c:' and ‘d:' with your hard drive and CD drive letters as appropriate):

 

Your comments (8) Click to add a new comment

ultranet

October 24th

ultranet

8. nowadays with many people having a fast internet connection, an online backup service is worth considering... some are free (for 1 to 5 GB of data) and appear like a network drive on PCs.

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Some have scheduled backup s/w and one I use will do a 'hot copy' as soon as a directory has new/updated content. Great for invoices and small databases.

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Similar is probably available for Mac users, but more likely to charge a fee!

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weeve_stalmer

April 24th

weeve_stalmer

7. My worst PC experience was ever bothering buying one of the wretched things. I bought my first iBook around four years ago and I've never looked back... There really is no point for home users to bother with virus and trojan-ridden PCs... I know it's been said (by Mac afficionados) hundreds of thousands of times, but it really is an incredible problem with PCs, both in the home and for businesses.

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weeve_stalmer

April 24th

weeve_stalmer

6. My worst PC experience was ever bothering buying one of the wretched things. I bought my first iBook around four years ago and I've never looked back... There really is no point for home users to bother with virus and trojan-ridden PCs... I know it's been said (by Mac afficionados) hundreds of thousands of times, but it really is an incredible problem with PCs, both in the home and for businesses.

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james

April 24th

james

5. My worst disaster came about when I was at University. I built a new PC at a time when Half-Life 2 was a brand new, graphically advanced game. The PC worked fine and I was pleased with it...

However, when I played it, a component in my PC case overheated and kept blue-screening the system. From then on, at random times my system would overheat and blue screen. It was worse in the summer, for obvious reasons.

At one point i had the side off with a desk fan blowing into the case to keep things cool. I changed out the graphics card, soundcard, processor, memory, HDD... I never figured it out. I assume now that it was the chipset on the motherboard or something like that, but I'll never know. One thing is for sure, I never want to build my own PC ever again.

My new Mesh has been problem-free since I bought it six months ago. And with prices as they are, there's no need to build a PC ever again anyway...

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nicolasmerritt

April 24th

nicolasmerritt

4. My worst disasters have been self-inflicted, although I decided it was time to take backing up seriously when a motherboard failure on my last iBook meant I couldn't use the screen - and therefore anything else (although there were workarounds).

Then there was that time years ago when I chucked a memory expansion pack against the wall because it had crashed my Spectrum. Picking the ruined and twisted chips out of the wreckage was how I learned not repeat that mistake.

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raffles

April 22nd

raffles

3. Backing up regularly is critical to safeguard data, no question about it. Equally important is the ability to retrieve accidentally deleted files that were modified after the last backup, from an 'emptied' recycle bin or network. The software should be always installed and active on the system because the chances of recovery diminish with post-deletion disk write activity. It's always better to have a proactive data protection plan in place rather than fish for emergency solutions after disaster strikes.

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