home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!emory!ogicse!mimbres.cs.unm.edu!constellation!a.cs.okstate.edu!worley
- From: worley@a.cs.okstate.edu (WORLEY LAWRENCE JA)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Subject: Re: NO ROM BASIC, SYSTEM HALTED ???
- Message-ID: <1993Jan9.064301.3561@a.cs.okstate.edu>
- Date: 9 Jan 93 06:43:01 GMT
- Article-I.D.: a.1993Jan9.064301.3561
- References: <trung.726508956@sundance>
- Organization: Oklahoma State University
- Lines: 43
-
- From article <trung.726508956@sundance>, by trung@sundance.SJSU.EDU (Trung Tran):
- >>> rubin@procon.jhuapl.edu (Don Rubin) writes:
- >>>
- >>> >I have been fooling around with a new motherboard
- >>> >and some disks and get the following message when
- >>> >I try to boot a 340mb IDE drive
- >>>
- >>> >NO ROM BASIC
- >>> >SYSTEM HALTED
- >>>
- >>> You may not have the boot partition active. Hookup the drive and run fdisk
- >>> off
- >>> floppy, and check the partition status.
- >
- >>I had this message pop up regularly after about 3 years' of almost
- >>round-the-clock usage of a Taiwanese clone computer. My dealer said
- >>indicated a motherboard problem. I suspected my system was overheating from
- >>too much use, and since I began turning it off a few hours a day to let it
- >>cool, the problem has disappeared. In any case, the problem certainly was
- >>not related to anything having to do with my boot partition or hard disk, at
- >>least not with my system.
- >
- > Well, I just saw this on my 486-50 last night. I'm not really sure about
- > the heat-related theory. It happened to me when I just got home from work.
- > I turned on the PC and there it was. After a cold reboot, it disappeared.
- > I'm pretty sure this was the first time I saw it. Even if it was
- > heat-related, I installed a CPU cooler (a small fan mounted on a heat-sink)
- > for my 486 to prevent it from getting fried.
- >
- > Anyhow, anyone else has any comment?
-
- Yes. I have had a similar problem on my 386-40 before. It has only happened
- twice that I recall, and both times were upon a program losing it's cookies
- running in the Windows 3.1 environment! I have not been able to duplicate
- the error, but it seems to be some catastrophic error (bad op-code or the
- CPU gets confused/out of sync with some support circuitry) that causes
- the entire system to come crashing to a halt. Older computers used to have
- a basic interpreter built into ROM (before everyone was assumed to have a
- disk drive installed), so when it can't find that to fall back in to, it just
- halts. Just one of those things, I guess.
- :)
-
- -Jason
-