My PC has recently been out of action for 7 months though I have now got it up and running. I changed the motherboard, PSU and put in a new graphics card. Of course I had to install a new copy of Windows XP due to having a new motherboard but since I did that my boot up times are ridiculously long - I'm talking about 3-4 minutes or so here.
The majority of the time is spent on the black screen with the white bars before the Windows XP logo appears (with the blue moving bar) and all the time I can hear a repeating noise from the drive which doesn't sound good. I wouldn't say clicking, though it sounds like it's struggling to read/write from whatever gets read when Windows starts up.
I suppose it might be time to order a new drive soon (lacking money even for a drive for a while!) though what would you suggest in the meantime, is it likely bad sectors have developed since the PC was last on? I don't 100% know what is loaded when Windows boots up but I suspect it must be a part of the installation which is 'hard to read'.
Any ideas? I'm thinking possibly trying Recovery Console and checking the MBR. I have a Seagate SATA 120GB drive.
The majority of the time is spent on the black screen with the white bars before the Windows XP logo appears (with the blue moving bar) and all the time I can hear a repeating noise from the drive which doesn't sound good. I wouldn't say clicking, though it sounds like it's struggling to read/write from whatever gets read when Windows starts up.
I suppose it might be time to order a new drive soon (lacking money even for a drive for a while!) though what would you suggest in the meantime, is it likely bad sectors have developed since the PC was last on? I don't 100% know what is loaded when Windows boots up but I suspect it must be a part of the installation which is 'hard to read'.
Any ideas? I'm thinking possibly trying Recovery Console and checking the MBR. I have a Seagate SATA 120GB drive.