I learned 3 very valuable lessons during this exercise.
1. read, re-read and then RE-READ the tips from start to finish
2. see number one
3. if you have the data backed up and you have spent an hour and a half on the problem, reformat and reinstall
I only have myself to blame as I essentially passed over linny’s suggestion to “test the HDD”. I figured that the unit was only 5 months old; the likelihood of it being the hard drive was minimal (duuuh). I tested the memory, did a chkdsk /r and then finally decided to do a repair install. It then went into a logon / off loop and that was it.
Enter number 3… I had everything backed up; I should have just done it. So, in goes the Dell CD, reformat and reinstall this!!
Hmmm, reformat hangs at 10%.
Turn off, use W98 boot floppy, reformat… hangs at 10%.
Reread linny's post.
Restart with HDD test from Samsung… no IDE drive detected (it was a Samsung HDD).
Restart with Dell onboard diagnostics… error 1000-0145 and then 1000-0146.
The tech at Dell said “yup, that’s a serious fatal error”.
No kidding?
I spent an inappropriate amount of time on this and realize that, while there was a huge educational element to the outcome, I could have saved myself a lot of mental anguish by following number three however, I really could have saved myself a lot more headache if I had followed number 2 first.
Thank you both for all of your patience and input.
Finally, I have to report back to you on the week from Dell (sp). I had 4 machines go down in total, all of them Dells. This is not a rant on Dell as I have really never found anything wrong with them but… I wasn’t so sure last week (I am a dyed in the wool IBM fan).
One HDD (above),
one shutdown due to overheating CPU (known issue on Dimension 5100),
one motherboard replacement on a Optiplex GX270 (known issue) and
one integrated NIC failure on a Dimension 2100.
This isn’t a rant on Dell… earlier in the summer it was two weeks full of HP disasters. They say things happen in threes… what brand is next?
Thanks again.