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PC shuts down on its own

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DEFENDER01

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Nov 12, 2008, 6:56:10 AM11/12/08
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HI
I have a xp home media which shuts down and restarts.
this happens at irregular times it may go weeks no problem then while
browsing or running programs it will just shut down instantly and
restart.

when it shuts down the screen goes black and restarts as if i was
starting it from scratch then runs normally.
this only happens now and then and may go weeks before doing the same
thing again.
Thanks for any help.


--
DEFENDER01

Xandros

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Nov 12, 2008, 8:51:09 AM11/12/08
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Try turning off the auto restart feature. When the system crashes you should
get a blue screen with some cryptic information on it which might be
helpful. To turn the auto restart feature off go to Control Panel->System
Properties->Advanced tab->Startup and Recovery Section Settings
Button->uncheck box next to "Automatically restart".

You can also take a look at the Event Viewer and see what error messages are
posted there. Go to Control Panel->Administrative Tools->Event
Viewer->System and see which items have errors related to the time of the
crash.

Post the info back if need be.

--

Xandros


"DEFENDER01" <DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net> wrote in message
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Lionel

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Nov 12, 2008, 9:09:09 AM11/12/08
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I had this problem a long time ago (so it was on different everything) on
workstations I was supporting. It turned out to be the anti-virus software
restarting the computers everytime it did an update. Since they were being
used by customer service people who may be in the middle of taking an order
when it happened, it was not good.

I'd check to see what automatic updates you have running. Could be that.

Lionel

"DEFENDER01" <DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net> wrote in message
news:DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net...
>

DEFENDER01

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Nov 12, 2008, 10:23:06 AM11/12/08
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Lionel;3213737 Wrote:
> I had this problem a long time ago (so it was on different everything)
> on
> workstations I was supporting. It turned out to be the anti-virus
> software
> restarting the computers everytime it did an update. Since they were
> being
> used by customer service people who may be in the middle of taking an
> order
> when it happened, it was not good.
>
> I'd check to see what automatic updates you have running. Could be
> that.
>
> Lionel
>
> "DEFENDER01" DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net wrote in message
> news:DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net...-

>
> HI
> I have a xp home media which shuts down and restarts.
> this happens at irregular times it may go weeks no problem then while
> browsing or running programs it will just shut down instantly and
> restart.
>
> when it shuts down the screen goes black and restarts as if i was
> starting it from scratch then runs normally.
> this only happens now and then and may go weeks before doing the same
> thing again.
> Thanks for any help.
>
>
>
>
> --
> DEFENDER01 -
Many thanks for the reply's.
i will look into the suggestions and let you know what a find.
problem is it maybe a while before this happens again and like most
things always at an awkward time ie when in the middle of something.


--
DEFENDER01

PJG

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Nov 12, 2008, 11:12:08 AM11/12/08
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You should look at your event viewer in control panel admin tools. Failing a
good error message in there. Your mainboard would have come with some tools
which will tell you how hot your machine is getting. I found normally that if
it's random then it's hardware failure and normally overheating cpu. Product
updates normally warn and give you a timer or message before rebooting even
microsoft updates. You should also make sure you have a stable power source,
UPS is always a good idea, preferebly a "line interactive ups" or better yet
"on-line ups" whatever you can afford, any make will do just ensure you have
one which gives you enough power to run your computer and monitor. If you
find your machine is overheating make sure all the fans a spinning and that
the fans speed up as the cpu gets hotter, the Pentium 4 Dual core CPU's had
some issues with this.

Peter Foldes

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Nov 12, 2008, 9:25:04 PM11/12/08
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Classic Power Supply warning. Check Power Supply for dust and overheating and failing fan

--
Peter

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"DEFENDER01" <DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net> wrote in message news:DEFENDER0...@pcbanter.net...
>

RMD

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Nov 12, 2008, 10:14:43 PM11/12/08
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It was bad RAM on one of my machines.

The bad RAM showed up on a free RAM tester I used.

Ross

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