Help with XP installation?!?!?!?!

p8ntballsnyper

New Member
Ok I just got a new computer and I assemblyed it and had to get a new HDD because the other one was bad but yeah anyways here is my problem. I get all the way through the partioning of my SATA HDD and I get to where xp installs devises and blah blue screen of death giving me a IRQL_LESS_THAN_OR_EQUAL error. I have no idea what to do can anyone help with my problem. By the way its windows xp professional OEM.
any advise is helpful.

the error code is 0x0000000A (0x03F00406, 0x00000002, 0x00000000, 0x804f8c38)
 
Last edited:
p8ntballsnyper said:
Ok I just got a new computer and I assemblyed it and had to get a new HDD because the other one was bad but yeah anyways here is my problem. I get all the way through the partioning of my SATA HDD and I get to where xp installs devises and blah blue screen of death giving me a IRQL_LESS_THAN_OR_EQUAL error. I have no idea what to do can anyone help with my problem. By the way its windows xp professional OEM.
any advise is helpful.

the error code is 0x0000000A (0x03F00406, 0x00000002, 0x00000000, 0x804f8c38)


I found an article that relates specifically to this...

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q130802/


General Information on STOP 0x0000000A
View products that this article applies to.
Article ID : 130802
Last Review : November 21, 2003
Revision : 3.0
This article was previously published under Q130802
SUMMARY
One of the more frequent trap codes generated by Windows NT is STOP 0x0000000A. This STOP message can be caused by both hardware and software problems. To determine the specific cause, you must debug the STOP. However, some general information can be learned by examining the parameters of the STOP message and the STOP screen information.
MORE INFORMATION
STOP 0x0000000A indicates a kernel mode process or driver attempted to access a memory address that it did not have permission to access. The most common cause of this error is a bad or corrupt pointer that references an incorrect location in memory. A pointer is a variable used by a program to refer to a block of memory. If the variable has a bad value in it, then the program tries to access memory that it should not. When this occurs in a user mode application, it generates an access violation. When it occurs in kernel mode, it generates a STOP 0x0000000A message.

To determine what process or driver tried to access memory it should not, look at the parameters displayed on the STOP screen information. For example, in the following STOP message

STOP 0x0000000A(0xWWWWWWWW, 0xXXXXXXXX, 0xYYYYYYYY, 0xZZZZZZZZ)
IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
** Address 0xZZZZZZZZ has base at <address>- <driver>


The four parameters inside the parenthesis have the following meaning:
0xWWWWWWWW Address that was referenced improperly
0xXXXXXXXX IRQL that was required to access the memory
0xYYYYYYYY Type of access, 0=Read, 1=Write
0xZZZZZZZZ Address of instruction which attempted to reference
the memory at 0xWWWWWWWW


If the last parameter (0xZZZZZZZZ) falls within the address range of one of the device drivers loaded on the system, you will know which device driver was running when the memory access occurred. This driver is often identified in the third line of the STOP screen:

**Address 0xZZZZZZZZ has base at <address>- <driver name>

If <driver name> is a specific driver, search in the Microsoft Knowledge Base on the keyword 0x0000000A and the driver name. If you don't find any relevant articles, contact Microsoft Product Support.


apparently
0x03F00406 = 0xWWWWWWWW Address that was referenced improperly
0x00000002 = 0xXXXXXXXX IRQL that was required to access the memory
0x00000000 = 0xYYYYYYYY Type of access, 0=Read, 1=Write
0x804f8c38 = 0xZZZZZZZZ Address of instruction which attempted to reference the memory at 0xWWWWWWWW

What ever it is that is nmessing up is on irq #2 with this address "0x03F00406" If there is a driver involved it will be identified on the third line like this "0xZZZZZZZZ has base at <address>- <driver name>"


Help anyone else?
 
Yeah this helps alot but what if it doesn't give me a driver name? I don't believe it does. Right now I am starting all over from scratch and I am partioning the HDD right now so Ill check if it comes up again. Another question is do I have to pay to contact microsoft because my software is OEM? I heard I did, but yeah thanks for finding this. I at least kind of know what to look for now. Thanks alot I will keep you posted on anything else that comes up.
 
Here is the update on my wonderful situation:

Reformatted and installed windows up to 39 minutes left, right after you have to restart your computer and got the IRQL_LESS_THAN_OR_EQUAL error

restarted computer and didn't even get to the windows installation screen and got a PFN_LIST_CORRUPT error 0x0000004E (0x0000008F, 0x0003CD38, 0x0003CD00, 0x00000000)

restarted computer and got to windows installation screen and got the IRQL_LESS_THAN_OR_EQUAL error 0x0000000A (0x00000000, 0x00000002, 0x00000001, 0x8051E106)

restarted again and WIMDOWS INSTALLED!!! but when windows had to restart to finish installation I got a PFN_LIST_CORRUPT error 0x0000004E (0x0000008F, 0x0001A208, 0x0001A200, 0x00000000)

restarted computer in safe mode and it gets to the start up screen and freezes at the Windows is starting up screen. What should I do? could it possibly be a bad disk? or is it still a driver/ hardware error? Any advise is great! And should I just call Microsoft to fix the problem? And if I call Microsoft do I have to pay for tech support because I have OEM software? PLease any answers are greatly appreciated.
 
NEW UPDATE:

ok I got the windows xp home edition disk out of my dads laptop and went through installation. It worked fine, but I had to use my other PC's product key. Which means I can't activate it. But anyhow why would windows home install with no problems and windows pro have problems. Could it be the disk? or is it just a simple driver error? I don't believe it is a hardware issue though it could be but I found all my parts on the hardware compatabilitly list exccept for my motherboard because I couldn't find a number to look up. So yeah how could I find out if it is the CD and not a driver problem. Any solutions.
 
It sounds like during the PRO installation, when the files were copied over to your disk, they may have been corrupted.

Boot your PC from a floppy, with CD and SATA support loaded.
Copy the XP files manually to your hard-disk and run SETUP from here.
 
I know this is bring up an old forum but I still can't get Pro to install I had given up and just reinstalled home everytime the activation ran up but I want pro now and I want to stop reinstalling, How do I boot from a floppy with CD and SATA support loaded and Copy the files manually. Has anyone else have this problem, My friend had this problem and the only thing we had in common is a gig of ram and an AMD 64 bit processor, but he got an old disk without SP1 and it worked, Any suggestions would be nice.
 
I noticed from an earlier message that the error was on IRQ-2. This controls the MEMORY REFRESH CYCLES on the PC. Try the following:

:) Remove 1 of the MEMORY DIMMS, and try re-installing XP PRO.
(Matching pairs, (Same SPEED, SIZE and PARITY), are required in the first two slots).

:) Check any JUMPERS on the motherboard for CLOCK-SPEEDS.
(Doesn't apply to all motherboards).

:) Check the BIOS SETUP for MEMORY REFRESH and CLOCK SPEEDS.
(Use the AUTO DETECT option if available.
 
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