BSOD in safe mode
From: Ted Moes
Date: Sun, 3 May 2009 08:41:01 -0700

I have to boot to safe mode because boot sequence will keep restarting even
with a repair boot ini, ntldr, ntdetect.com but when I tried to set the
correct time if crashed with bsod. Can not use restore didnt restore
Just tried bootin to debugging mode and its just a black screen.
when booting  safe mode with networking am able to access network and
internet but takes like five minutes to boot

BSOD Tech Info:
0x0000008E (0x0000005, 0x8066442F,0xB7AC6C, 0x00000000)
thank you for any help possible
ted
[Reply] Re: BSOD in safe mode
From: Gerry
Date: Sun, 3 May 2009 17:32:35 +0100

Ted

Background information on Stop Error message 0x8E
http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms794023.aspx

0x0000008E: KERNEL_MODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED
A kernel mode program generated an exception which the error handler
didn't catch. These are nearly always hardware compatibility issues
(which sometimes means a driver issue or a need for a BIOS upgrade).
Source: http://aumha.org/a/stop.htm

Look at the Stop Error Report.
Under the code a file is sometimes named.

Disable automatic restart on system failure.  This should help by
allowing time to write down the STOP code properly. Right click on
the My Computer icon on the Desktop and select Properties, Advanced,
Start-Up and Recovery, System Failure and uncheck box before
Automatically Restart.

Do not re-enable automatic restart on system failure. Check for
variants of the Stop Error message.

Are there any yellow question marks in Device Manager? Right click on
the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties,
Hardware,Device Manager. If yes what is the Device Error code?


--


Hope  this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ted Moes wrote:
[Reply] Re: BSOD in safe mode
From: db ´?`·.. ><)))º>` .. .
Date: Sun, 3 May 2009 12:25:05 -0500

firstly, if the clock
is wrong in windows

then it is due to your
motherboard clock.

you will need to access
your motherboards cmos/
bios settings and change
the clock there.

then windows clock will
be insync with your hardware
clock.

incidentally, if your mother
board clock is not keeping
good/accurate time,

then it is time to change
out the motherboard
battery with a new one.

check your computer
manual or the faq's from
your motherboards homesite
to get the instructions to
do the above steps.

--

dbA??A??A?`A??...A??><)))A??>
DatabaseBen, Retired Professional
- Systems Analyst
- Database Developer
- Accountancy
- Veteran of the Armed Forces
- @hotmail.com
"share the nirvana" - dbZen

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Ted Moes" <guest@unknown-email.com> wrote in message news:guest@unknown-email.com...

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