T60p will not boot - SOLVED
Posted: Mon Jun 04, 2012 7:55 pm
Longtime Thinkpad Owner with good general knowledge but limited troubleshooting and repair experience.
Thinkpad T60p Type 2613-CTO (about 5 yrs old)
XP Pro
3GB Ram
120MB HD
Machine has been lightly used 4 or 5 times a week for with standard internet applications.
Until now, I have had no problems whatsoever other than the battery no longer holding a charge.
Symptoms:
Had an inadvertent power loss (power cord was disconnected with a dead battery) resulting in immediate shutdown. Machine had been operating normally to that point and was regularly maintained with security updates and scans.
When restarting, the computer gets to the XP Windows screen and after attempting to start Windows the blue screen states:
UNMOUNTABLE BOOT VOLUME
Technical Information:
***STOP: 0x000000ED (0x8AFCF4F0, 0x00000006, 0x000000000, 0x00000000)
Multiple attempts yields same result. Cannot boot into Safe Mode but I can get into the BIOS settings (but don't know what most of them mean).
Removed the hard drive and attached it via USB to another PC. It took a few minutes to be recognized as drive on another computer (it was assigned a drive letter) but reported that that the drive had no media. I cannot see any information (folders or files) on the drive in Windows Explorer. There is no recovery media and I cannot get to the recovery partition on the drive and do not have any recovery disks.
My guess is that the hard drive failed and would like to confirm this opinion and see what is necessary to fix the problem.
Unless someone has a suggestion on how to revive the drive, I need to know how to get the recovery information necessary on a new hard drive. I have a new drive that I can use. I don't need to recover any data from the old drive.
The options I'm considering are getting a recovery disk for XP or upgrading to Win 7.
Assuming the hard drive is beyond repair, which option would you recommend and, in the case of a Win 7 upgrade, any hints with regard to minimizing any problems during the upgrade. In particular, will the 64-bit Win 7 work without any hassle or should I sick with the 32-bit version (64-bit is less expensive to buy).
Any help greatly appreciated.
Thinkpad T60p Type 2613-CTO (about 5 yrs old)
XP Pro
3GB Ram
120MB HD
Machine has been lightly used 4 or 5 times a week for with standard internet applications.
Until now, I have had no problems whatsoever other than the battery no longer holding a charge.
Symptoms:
Had an inadvertent power loss (power cord was disconnected with a dead battery) resulting in immediate shutdown. Machine had been operating normally to that point and was regularly maintained with security updates and scans.
When restarting, the computer gets to the XP Windows screen and after attempting to start Windows the blue screen states:
UNMOUNTABLE BOOT VOLUME
Technical Information:
***STOP: 0x000000ED (0x8AFCF4F0, 0x00000006, 0x000000000, 0x00000000)
Multiple attempts yields same result. Cannot boot into Safe Mode but I can get into the BIOS settings (but don't know what most of them mean).
Removed the hard drive and attached it via USB to another PC. It took a few minutes to be recognized as drive on another computer (it was assigned a drive letter) but reported that that the drive had no media. I cannot see any information (folders or files) on the drive in Windows Explorer. There is no recovery media and I cannot get to the recovery partition on the drive and do not have any recovery disks.
My guess is that the hard drive failed and would like to confirm this opinion and see what is necessary to fix the problem.
Unless someone has a suggestion on how to revive the drive, I need to know how to get the recovery information necessary on a new hard drive. I have a new drive that I can use. I don't need to recover any data from the old drive.
The options I'm considering are getting a recovery disk for XP or upgrading to Win 7.
Assuming the hard drive is beyond repair, which option would you recommend and, in the case of a Win 7 upgrade, any hints with regard to minimizing any problems during the upgrade. In particular, will the 64-bit Win 7 work without any hassle or should I sick with the 32-bit version (64-bit is less expensive to buy).
Any help greatly appreciated.