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Help...BSOD...is it cauz of loose hdd cable???
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<blockquote data-quote="Crazy_Eddy" data-source="post: 247838" data-attributes="member: 167"><p>Cables supplied with motherboards are usually good enough. Any signs of wear and tear near the cables/ports? Try a new cable to ascertain if the problem goes away, new SATA cables should be easy to get (can look around for newer SATA cables with "hooks" that grab on firmly to the ports).</p><p></p><p>Make sure there are no sharp 90 degree bends in your SATA cable.</p><p></p><p>Your disk is probably formated using the NTFS filesystem. NTFS is a lot more reliable than FAT32, so you dont get those repetitive "Checking disk for errors" as with FAT32.</p><p></p><p>You can probably run "chkdsk /f c:" in a command prompt, and it will schedule a disk check the next time windows boots.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Crazy_Eddy, post: 247838, member: 167"] Cables supplied with motherboards are usually good enough. Any signs of wear and tear near the cables/ports? Try a new cable to ascertain if the problem goes away, new SATA cables should be easy to get (can look around for newer SATA cables with "hooks" that grab on firmly to the ports). Make sure there are no sharp 90 degree bends in your SATA cable. Your disk is probably formated using the NTFS filesystem. NTFS is a lot more reliable than FAT32, so you dont get those repetitive "Checking disk for errors" as with FAT32. You can probably run "chkdsk /f c:" in a command prompt, and it will schedule a disk check the next time windows boots. [/QUOTE]
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Help...BSOD...is it cauz of loose hdd cable???
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