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zuba2015-07-26 14:25:15
Iron
zuba, 2015-07-26 14:25:15

PC freezes when installing Windows and at startup?

During startup, the PC freezes at the moment "verifying dmi pool data" I
thought to format the disk using Acronis, it freezes at the time of startup from the Acronis disk
I tried to format it from a regular Windows installer, it freezes during the installation of Widndows I wiped all
the dust in the system unit
from another PC, the result is zero
Changed the video card, the result is zero
Reset the bios, swapped boot disks, turned off Flupik
So far, to no avail ...

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3 answer(s)
A
Artem @Jump, 2015-07-26
curated by the

Looks like the dust hasn't been cleaned well.
Wipe the dust well, try to change the tilt of the system unit, it is desirable to do all operations on the growing moon.
Be sure to report successes and failures.

F
FAN2 tom, 2015-07-26
@FAN2tom

Here's what Google writes :
If the computer freezes at the Verifying DMI Pool Data stage, then this means that any change in the system configuration does not allow it to boot further. Most often this is due to the hard drive itself, its settings in the BIOS, or the installation of new devices. The reasons for this may be the following:
Incorrect boot options from hard drives in the BIOS (type, Native / AHCI modes, RAID, drive order)
Damaged IDE / SATA hard drive cable or bad contact
Damaged MBR boot area on the drive
Installing new devices
Incorrect BIOS update
Damaged firmware and/or BIOS chip
They offer the following sequence of actions:
Remove all peripheral devices from the motherboard, disconnect disks, video card, let it start without anything. You can determine the start by the sound in the system speaker (or POST card, if you have one).
If the board does not start, reset the CMOS settings with a jumper on the motherboard or by closing contacts
. Connect peripheral devices, disks back, start the board. Go to CMOS Setup (Del or F2) and reset CMOS Setup to default.
Set the boot order so that the disk on which the boot record is located is the first, type - Auto, disable RAID if you do not use it. For Windows XP, disable AHCI mode if it was not used during Windows installation.
Reboot the computer, if the system still does not boot - check and replace the disk cable, disconnect other disks.
If this does not help, then there is a problem with the MBR boot area of ​​the disk. For example, it could be damaged when installing some Windows 7 activators, as well as enabling system disk compression when using the activator.
You can restore the boot record by booting from a bootable Windows installation DVD in recovery mode (called Windows RE) or from a bootable recovery USB/DVD.
In the console (command promt) that you launch in one way or another, you need to execute the Bootrec.exe /FixMbr command (for Windows 7, more details here) or the fixmbr and fixboot commands (Windows XP). You can also just use fdisk /mbr, which simply overwrites the new MBR.
If it still doesn't boot, unplug all HDDs and try booting from CD/DVD. If it works, format the disk completely by removing the MBR and install the OS again.
If you can't boot even from a CD/DVD, then the BIOS is corrupted. Try restoring it from a backup (backup BIOS if available - on some Gigabyte, ASUS motherboards). For some boards, the BIOS can be flashed from a floppy / CD at startup by holding certain keys on the keyboard - read the manuals for your mothers. I remind you that when flashing from DOS for Award awdflash, the /cd and /cp keys allow you to clear DMI and ESCD.
In the most neglected cases, you will have to flash the BIOS on the programmer in the service.

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nfire, 2015-07-26
@nfire

You have done everything except one thing - replacing the hard drive. The conclusion is not difficult.

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