Hi guys,
A computer that I built for my Dad has been crashing a lot recently. The computer is used within his business and it's really important that I try and fix it, only I'm in Bristol and he's 3 1/2 hours away in Cornwall. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Firstly, setup is as follows: i5 2500K, Gigabyte GA-Z68XP-UD3P, 16GB 1600MHz Corsair Vengeance (Low Profile), GTX 460 1GB, 64GB Crucial M4, 2 x 1TB Samsung HDD's, 1 x 3TB Seagate HDD, Windows 7 Pro.
So I'm at university now, but before I left I re-formatted his computer and re-installed everything from scratch in order to use Intel Smart Response and make a few changes to the way backups were made. I also flashed the bios to the latest UEFI version. It all seemed to be working perfectly. Sata mode was "RAID" and I followed the setup instructions to a T. SRT setup was as follows: one of the 1TB Samsung HDD's was being accelerated by the 64GB Crucial M4.
Recently however, it's been crashing a lot (everyday perhaps) and one time the smart response array failed. Luckily no data was lost so I simply re-enabled SRT and everything seemed to be working once again.
Today though, the computer crashed and this time we can't get back into Windows. After getting my Dad to check the bios, it seems the settings have been reset or altered somehow. SATA Mode was now "IDE" and various boot priority options seemed odd. For example, one of the boot priority options (according to my Dad) seemed to be related to Epson Stylus storage or something (I can't remember the exact wording). This PC is used with various Epson printers btw.
So I set about helping him rebuild the bios settings that I had set initially, but it still won't boot into Windows. It's very difficult to direct him around the bios when talking over the phone and I can't see his screen. Before I was using Windows Remote Assistance, but obviously this isn't possible for working on the bios.
We tried setting each 1 TB drive in turn as the device to boot from, and disabled all other boot options, but it still failed to find the Windows boot files.
Have I missed something or is it simply not possible to get it working without starting over? If I were at home this is what I would be doing at this point, but I'm at university and cannot simply go home. Would any data be lost from the C drive given that the bios mode changed from RAID to IDE?
Help please!!!
A computer that I built for my Dad has been crashing a lot recently. The computer is used within his business and it's really important that I try and fix it, only I'm in Bristol and he's 3 1/2 hours away in Cornwall. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Firstly, setup is as follows: i5 2500K, Gigabyte GA-Z68XP-UD3P, 16GB 1600MHz Corsair Vengeance (Low Profile), GTX 460 1GB, 64GB Crucial M4, 2 x 1TB Samsung HDD's, 1 x 3TB Seagate HDD, Windows 7 Pro.
So I'm at university now, but before I left I re-formatted his computer and re-installed everything from scratch in order to use Intel Smart Response and make a few changes to the way backups were made. I also flashed the bios to the latest UEFI version. It all seemed to be working perfectly. Sata mode was "RAID" and I followed the setup instructions to a T. SRT setup was as follows: one of the 1TB Samsung HDD's was being accelerated by the 64GB Crucial M4.
Recently however, it's been crashing a lot (everyday perhaps) and one time the smart response array failed. Luckily no data was lost so I simply re-enabled SRT and everything seemed to be working once again.
Today though, the computer crashed and this time we can't get back into Windows. After getting my Dad to check the bios, it seems the settings have been reset or altered somehow. SATA Mode was now "IDE" and various boot priority options seemed odd. For example, one of the boot priority options (according to my Dad) seemed to be related to Epson Stylus storage or something (I can't remember the exact wording). This PC is used with various Epson printers btw.
So I set about helping him rebuild the bios settings that I had set initially, but it still won't boot into Windows. It's very difficult to direct him around the bios when talking over the phone and I can't see his screen. Before I was using Windows Remote Assistance, but obviously this isn't possible for working on the bios.
We tried setting each 1 TB drive in turn as the device to boot from, and disabled all other boot options, but it still failed to find the Windows boot files.
Have I missed something or is it simply not possible to get it working without starting over? If I were at home this is what I would be doing at this point, but I'm at university and cannot simply go home. Would any data be lost from the C drive given that the bios mode changed from RAID to IDE?
Help please!!!