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  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
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Guest

Dear Fellows

I have weird feeling that their is a problem in My computer.When i try to
put a cd in my computer it reboot it self and it will do continously unless
and until the cd is not removed and if i put the same cd on other pc'c cdrom
it works fine.Can any one help me in this matter.

Regards

S&S
 
Dear Fellows

I have weird feeling that their is a problem in My computer.When i try to
put a cd in my computer it reboot it self and it will do continously unless
and until the cd is not removed and if i put the same cd on other pc'c cdrom
it works fine.Can any one help me in this matter.

Regards

S&S

Hmmm, eliminate the chance that it is a defective CD drive by getting out
a bootable disc like the XP install disc and see if you can boot from it.

If that works, then you need to check your system for viruses, etc. and/or
improperly configured drivers or filters interfering with the CD drive.
 
Thanks for your advice.But if it is a defective Cd it would have reacted the
same way on other Pc.but it didnt .As far the virus and conflication are
concer their is nothing like that In my Pc.I update My computer on weekly
basis so i think it has given no Problem or virus attacks to me.If their is
other way to check it please share with so i could see where the problem lies

Regard

S&S
 
10mbps said:
Thanks for your advice.But if it is a defective Cd it would have
reacted the same way on other Pc.but it didnt .As far the virus and
conflication are concer their is nothing like that In my Pc.I update
My computer on weekly basis so i think it has given no Problem or
virus attacks to me.If their is other way to check it please share
with so i could see where the problem lies

With the computer turned off and unplugged, open the case and reseat the
ribbon cable and power supply connector going to the drive. Restart.
Does the problem still occur? If yes, then swap out the drive for a
known-working one. Problem fixed? If yes, throw out the original drive.
Let us know what happens after doing this.

Malke
 
While that may seem logical, a defective CD may get a totally different
reaction from various machines depending on the drive and the build. Every
Windows installation has a collage of services and drivers running
simultaneously so that virtually no two computers are identical.

What you should also consider is your power supply may be overwhelmed and
slowly dieing. When you insert a CD and it spins up, it overloads. As you
described, it continues until you remove the CD.
To test this, try attaching a USB hard drive or other USB device(s) to put
additional strain on the supply. A solid state USB device won't tax the PS
enough, though. Preferably, attach something with a motor.
 
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