This system:
Asus P6T motherboard with i7-920 CPU- 6GB RAM
Two WD SATA Black hard disks - 5 + 3 partitions all NTFS
Samsung SH-S223F 22x SATA Burner - DVD +R -R *RW -RW -RAM -ROM
Floppy Drive
Rig has been running XP without a hitch for 9 months
Any ideas why it won't boot from DVD?
OK, got a suggestion here.
Mike 2/27/2009 6:27:26 PM
Cons: This DVD player stopped working after one month of use. I started
doing some investigating and there is a known problem where the
drive will stop working with DVDs and only work with CDs. Samsung
is aware of this problem and said a firmware upgrade would fix it.
Unfortunately this is not the case (at least it didn't help me).
I will not be buying a samsung DVD player again. Don't be fooled.
Do other kinds of operations work OK with that drive. Can you
burn a DVD on it ? If you use one of those tools that scans
for errors (PI/PO) on a recently burned DVD, does that work
OK ? If you have a burner program, can you get the burner program
to make an ISO out of the Win7 DVD (copy to a file) ?
*******
I took a quick look at the Asus forum, and don't see a trend there to suggest
the motherboard is the problem. I didn't go through all the threads.
http://vip.asus.com/forum/topic.aspx?board_id=1&model=P6T&SLanguage=en-us
HTH,
Paul
Hey Paul - Thanks for the info. So I should suspect a faulty DVD drive and
go from there?
I did some tests and the drive will recognize a blank DVD-R and Nero CD-DVD
Tool will run it's tests. And A DVD movie will play from the desktop.
Is there anything different about reading DVD's when booting?
I will try burning a DVD later to see if that works.
Anyone out there install W7 on a P6T with a SATA DVD drive?
"TVeblen" <killth...@hal.net> wrote in message
news:hgbc50$r9u$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
Interesting enough from the information Paul brought out about Samsung
suggesting a firmware upgrade I would check into that as well for your
drive.
I'd purchased an Asus laptop this summer with promise of a free Windows 7
upgrade. Receiving the upgrade disk a couple of weeks ago an insert with the
disk said to upgrade the firmware of the Matshita DVD-RAM drive on the
laptop before attempting the upgrade. I could not locate any firmware
update, but the installation went OK except for it being 4 and a half hours
long. Perhaps on certain drives that firmware flash is necessary.
--
Jan Alter
bea...@verizon.net
So is the Windows 7 disc readable from WinXP ? Can you explore it ?
I would think, if you can read the media while in WinXP, maybe it
isn't a laser problem.
For that matter, you did say "Upgrade DVD". Doesn't that mean
you run it while booted in the qualifying OS ? Like, run
a setup.exe from the media. The media probably isn't bootable!
(No boot sector or whatever is used for booting.)
It may not be like previous upgrades, where you could boot
the media and have it check for a qualifying OS. Maybe this
one requires you to start the install while you're booted from
WinXP. I hope it doesn't trash WinXP as part of the install...
Paul
Thing is, it does boot from CD on the other computers, that is, I get the
"press any key" bit. To upgrade from XP *requires* a clean install (format,
wipe, etc. XP off the disk). Only Vista can be upgraded in place. Not that I
would ever do that.
When I load the CD from the desktop I get this ominous message: "This
installation disk isn't compatible with your version of Windows. To Upgrade,
you need the correct installation disk. For more information, check your
computer's system information. To install a new copy of Windows, restart
(boot) your computer using the installation disk, and then select Custom
(Advanced)."
Everything I've read told me that you must install from the installation CD
at bootup. I ran the MS Upgrade Advisor and, of course, there were no major
issues with my machine.
I can read the files on the DVD from Windows XP desktop Explorer. The root
of the DVD has autorun.inf , bootmgr , bootmgr.efi , and setup.exe.
Perhaps I need to run setup.exe from a dos prompt?
>
> Thing is, it does boot from CD on the other computers, that is, I get the
> "press any key" bit. To upgrade from XP *requires* a clean install (format,
> wipe, etc. XP off the disk). Only Vista can be upgraded in place. Not that I
> would ever do that.
> When I load the CD from the desktop I get this ominous message: "This
> installation disk isn't compatible with your version of Windows. To Upgrade,
> you need the correct installation disk. For more information, check your
> computer's system information. To install a new copy of Windows, restart
> (boot) your computer using the installation disk, and then select Custom
> (Advanced)."
> Everything I've read told me that you must install from the installation CD
> at bootup. I ran the MS Upgrade Advisor and, of course, there were no major
> issues with my machine.
> I can read the files on the DVD from Windows XP desktop Explorer. The root
> of the DVD has autorun.inf , bootmgr , bootmgr.efi , and setup.exe.
> Perhaps I need to run setup.exe from a dos prompt?
>
Well, I'm running out of ideas. There are some options here for installation,
and it seems the disc is bootable according to this.
http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/clean_install_upgrade_media.asp
Paul
> DVD-Bootable to test.
>
Just a thought.
My motherboard is an Abit IP35 board so a bit older than yours but:
In my BIOS options under 'First boot device' it has various options
including:
SATA CDROM
P2-PIONEER DVD-
P3-PIONEER BD-R
Now, it's been a while but I seem to recall that the SATA CDROM option
didn't work for me.
So, if you have something similar in your BIOS then try selecting the option
that most closely matches your drive and try again.
Hope that helps.
--
Graham
Website - http://www.thedeathzone.free-online.co.uk
peter
--
If you find a posting or message from me offensive,inappropriate
or disruptive,please ignore it.
If you dont know how to ignore a posting complain
to me and I will be only too happy to demonstrate :-)
I have the Windows 7 Home Premium Family Pack.
I have tried both 32 bit and 64 bit disks (on all 3 computers). Both disks
would boot if I pressed any key on the two P4 computers with PATA drives.
Neither disk will boot on this i7 P6T machine.
There is only one OS on all 3 machines. Win XP-SP3 on all 3.
Hey Paul- Is it possible that because I have a SATA DVD drive in AHCI mode
that it could be confusing the installation disk? Do you think if I changed
the BIOS settings for the SATA controllers to legacy IDE mode it might get
the install disk to boot like it does on the P4's with PATA drives?
The firmware on the drive is newer than the firmware on Samsung's website.
sheesh.
they say sb00 for model bebe. i've got sb03.
"TVeblen" <killth...@hal.net> wrote in message
news:hgc10u$sk$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
Consider the thought of exchanging drives for one you have in another
computer. If it worked you're in business, if it doesn't then you know it's
not the drive, but perhaps the mb bios setting, or the windows upgrade
version.
--
Jan Alter
bea...@verizon.net
I found a solution to my immediate problem: installing W7 64 bit. I will be
using an USB Thumbdrive "Disk". Just tested it and I'm good to go.
According to the forum people it should also install much faster than DVD
too.
If interested, see here:
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/2432-usb-windows-7-installation-key-drive-create.html?filter[2]=General%20Tips
and here:
http://www.sevenforums.com/installation-setup/34853-common-installation-problems.html
I think my SATA DVD drive is garbage when it comes to UDF formatted disks.
I'll deal with that later.
I stuck the 32 bit disk in again this afternoon to see if I got the same
error as with the USB stick and the damn thing wouldn't boot - again - like
it did this morning. But before it could boot into windows I did a hard
reboot (reset) and then it worked.
So then I tried the same trick with the 64 bit disk: boot once, it sits
there blinking at "Boot Ready", hit the reset and reboot, and bang- up comes
the "Press any key" and I'm in.
WTF
Absolutely weird!!! it's a good story to tell around.
So practically it was fault of your machine, or do you think it's a
kind of common problem of W7 installation software?
There are many complaining about W7 bugs but there are many also very
satisfied by the new OS.
old machines or the software? this is the dilemma.
--
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