Computers & Internet Logo

Related Topics:

Anonymous Posted on Nov 23, 2010

Why won't my computer boot to the A drive? - Computers & Internet

  • Anonymous Nov 24, 2010

    My computer is a 2002 Gateway SOLO 1450 laptop.
    Why I am doing this? About 5 years ago the computer quit working and I took it to a local shop. They did not fix the computer but they did ruin the battery but I did not find this out until it was fixed by Gateway. I have been without a battery since then. Recently purchased a battry that the supplier stated would work in my unit. Battery is the sme configureatin but is higher voltage and current rating. My computer does not recognize this battery. Supplier says this can be corrected by updating the BIOS. Only one update available from Gateway. It consists of one file, 637 kb, and is a .exe file. My A drive seems to be working properly. It would seem that there is a problem with this file when it is transferred from the desktop to the floppy. I even transferred it to a CD but the computer would not boot to that drive even though it is # 1. I am awaiting any suggestions you may have and I will continue to do the transfer of the file to a floppy and see if I can it to run.

×

3 Answers

Jose Pino

Level 3:

An expert who has achieved level 3 by getting 1000 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Vice President:

An expert whose answer got voted for 100 times.

  • Master 563 Answers
  • Posted on Nov 23, 2010
Jose Pino
Master
Level 3:

An expert who has achieved level 3 by getting 1000 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Vice President:

An expert whose answer got voted for 100 times.

Joined: Oct 27, 2008
Answers
563
Questions
0
Helped
133188
Points
1604

The boot order is indicated by the BIOS or CMOS SETUP. You may need to enter to the SETUP and change the boot order, indicating to boot with A drive first. When you power up the computer, look for the message: "Press <A key> for CMOS SETUP" and enter to the cmos configuration.

Good luck.

Anonymous

Level 3:

An expert who has achieved level 3 by getting 1000 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Guru:

An expert who has written 7 tips or uploaded 3 video tips

  • Master 2,178 Answers
  • Posted on Nov 23, 2010
Anonymous
Master
Level 3:

An expert who has achieved level 3 by getting 1000 points

All-Star:

An expert that got 10 achievements.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Guru:

An expert who has written 7 tips or uploaded 3 video tips

Joined: Oct 21, 2010
Answers
2178
Questions
0
Helped
390719
Points
6614

Because the BIOS is probably set to boot the hard drive first. The A drive, second or third depending on the boot order set in the BIOS.

  • 3 more comments 
  • Anonymous Nov 23, 2010

    The BIOS default is CD/DVD first but it must have one of these in the drive or it will go to
    " removeable devices" which is the "A" drive in this case. If nothing is in this drive it will boot from the hard drive which is third and LAN is fouth. If I put a blank floppy in the A drive and boot I get a small dash flashing prompt. If I put a floppy with files in the A drive and boot I get an error message
    "Non system disk or disk error etc. If I change the set-up to boot from removable devices the same two problems occur. What I am trying to do is flash the BIOS with an updated BIOS that is on the floppy.

  • Anonymous Nov 23, 2010

    AHH...ok. You're missing a boot file in the floppy - that's why you're getting "Non system disk". Redo the file creation for the flash file. Something is missing.

  • Anonymous Nov 23, 2010

    There is only 1 file on the floppy, that is the new BIOS and it shows it is there if I look in "My computer" and open the a drive. The file downloads as a Zip file but I have no way of telling if it is un zipped other than the pop-up says it is unzipping the file.

  • Anonymous Nov 23, 2010

    What is the make and model of your computer?

  • Anonymous Nov 24, 2010

    Note: When updating your computer's BIOS, the update process fails if you use a floppy disk formatted in Microsoft® Windows® 2000, Windows NT®, or Windows XP. Instead, use a new IBM pre-formatted disk. Refer to Readme.txt file for more details.

×

Ad

Tom Gilligan

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Scholar:

An expert who has written 20 answers of more than 400 characters.

  • Contributor 111 Answers
  • Posted on Nov 23, 2010
Tom Gilligan
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Scholar:

An expert who has written 20 answers of more than 400 characters.

Joined: Nov 15, 2010
Answers
111
Questions
1
Helped
35972
Points
14

What are you trying to boot with? most current computers boot first to the cd (or dvd )drive then to the hard drive, then as a lst resort the a drive then the epromm boot from ethernet. you would have to adjust boot order (each computer does it different, but try F12 during boot) look at the messages at the bottom of the screen and it will say something like boot order or boot something. It will then allow you to select the A drive to boot from.

I’m happy to help further over the phone at https://www.6ya.com/expert/thomas_b83e841f114394f4

  • 7 more comments 
  • Anonymous Nov 23, 2010

    This does not have to do with boot order as the BIOS default is D drive, A drive, C drive and LAN. It should boot from the 1st dvice that has media in it. It dos not even if I chang the boot order to A drive first and have a floppy in it.

  • Tom Gilligan Nov 23, 2010

    what OS are you booting to? Does it try to read the disk? when was the last time you read the a drive? anything newer than win95 (except linux) is too big. It is easier to create a CD that is a boot disk. It should save you some insanity

  • Anonymous Nov 24, 2010

    My computer is a 2002 Gateway SOLO 1450 Laptop, XP OS. I did load this file on a CD but the computer would not boot to it. My current thinking is that there is a problem with the file as it transferred from my desktop to a disc, maybe corrupted or not fully open. If I put a blank floppy in the drive and boot all I get is a black screen with a small flashing cursor, no inputs are accepted, when I put the disk with the file on it in the drive and boot I get a disk error.

  • Tom Gilligan Nov 24, 2010

    got it. trying to boot to a bios update disk.
    how did you create the bootable floppy?
    Did they give you a file or a bootable image?
    to create a boot disk from xp Creating a Windows XP boot disk
    Create MS-DOS bootable diskette
    When formatting a floppy diskette, you have the option of creating a MS-DOS startup disk, just follow the steps below.
    Place diskette in the computer.
    Open "My Computer", right-click the A: drive and click Format.
    In the Format window, check Create an MS-DOS startup disk.
    Click Start
    once that is done, copy the bios file to the floppy, let me know how it goes.

  • Anonymous Nov 24, 2010

    The file was a download from Gateway, only one available. was downloaded to desktop. When opened in desktop an unzip window appeared and showed progress, almost immediately a word pad message screen would come up, it was about running the floppy. When I removed the word pad message the unzip screen had disappeared. This occured almost every time I opened the download. Occasionally for unkown reason the word pad message did not come up and the unzip routine would go to completion. I have made the restore disk on a new floppy and booted, the result was a normal boot with no error messages and nothing unusual. I am ready to re-try the BIOS installation but will not do it until you say so.

  • Tom Gilligan Nov 24, 2010

    I think you have nothing to lose. After not working for 5 years this sounds like your best shot.

  • Anonymous Nov 24, 2010

    Sorry if I gave you the impression the computer was not working, it usually works fine, I just have not had a good battery in it for 5 years. Over time the unit slows down and when it gets too slow for me I reload the OS and programs. I did this last Feb. and it was as fast as ever until about July when I realized I had not reloaded Norton. After reloading Norton it went back to slow mode.

  • Anonymous Nov 24, 2010

    Well I booted twice with the floppy in the A drive and I did not get a boot to a: just a normal boot. I went into the BIOS and changed the boot order to removable disk, CD drive, hard disk, LAN, now I got the disk error message. If you have any ideas let me know, in the meantime I am going to retry the transfer from download to disk and then boot.

  • Anonymous Nov 25, 2010

    I purchased a 10 pack of IMATION disks on 11-22, printed on the box is "IBM formatted 2HD". I have no way of knowing if this is a new format or an old format?

×

Add Your Answer

×

Uploading: 0%

my-video-file.mp4

Complete. Click "Add" to insert your video. Add

×

Loading...
Loading...

Related Questions:

0helpful
1answer

Ntldr missing computer won,t start

Check or replace data cables to hard drive
Check in bios that drive select is set to auto.
Boot to windows dvd and repair windows start up.
0helpful
1answer

Cloned Drive won't boot on Dell 1600SC

If you are using an image made from the IBM and it has a different processor and the board specs are different that can cause the drive not to boot it will act like it is then go into a perpetual boot. I would try to re image it again to insure that is ok on the drive also check the board If one is and AMD and the other an Intel then that would be part of the problem.
0helpful
1answer

Toshiba nb300 windows starter won't boot. PXE-E61 media test failure. check cable.

If your computer is working fine, then disable PXE boot in BIOS or remove from 1st boot option. This is a LAN (network) boot option. It can't find a DHCP server, that's why the media test failure is displayed. It's usually used to load an OS image from network.


For the most part not a real problem. More of a warning. Some corporate models use PXE to mass image.
If there is a problem (won't boot) then it lost communications to hard drive, and you need to check BIOS for hard drive.
0helpful
1answer

Labtop won't turn on

Turn on, hold F8 button down until boot menu appears. Download Norton Boot Recovry to disc from another computer. Install in ur CD/DVD drive. Boot ur computer. Or install ur operating system disc in cCD rom drive. Reboot computer, hold F2 button down, modify BIOS boot sequence so CD Rom in 1st boot device. Boot computer, repair or reinstall operating system.
0helpful
2answers

The laptop won't boot

probably the hard drive in your laptop is gone.
try booting ubuntu in live mode, so without installing it.
when the boot is completed, launch the tool gparted and see if it detects the hard drive: if it doesn't, you need to change the hard disk..
0helpful
1answer

Dell Inspiron 600m: No Boot Device. I'm a computer

Have you tried resetting the BIOS defaults? In doing so, it will force IDE re-detection and often resolve vague boot issues.
1helpful
2answers

Unmountable boot disk error on blue screen

first, recover your files. You will need to use some data recovery program like asoftech data recovery. you can download it from
http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/Back-Up-and-Recovery/Asoftech-Data-Recovery.shtml

I've had to use it many times in the past but in this case you need to plug that drive into another system as an external drive or slave drive and run the software from there. It will rebuild the drive and hopefully recover the files.

After you get back your files, you can then format the drive and reinstall your system.
1helpful
2answers

System error

I'd recommend that you use some data recovery program
1helpful
2answers

Windows will not boot on my Eeepc 1005HA. 0xc000000f -- The boot selection failed because a required device is inaccessible. I have tried to reinstall windows7 from USB (tested and working) but boot...

BootSuite is an awesome toolkit that includes a boot CD and several other data rescue tools that help get your PC going even if Windows won't start or computer won't boot up at all.
1helpful
1answer

Won't boot from dvd or hard drive, changed hard drives and still won't boot

Depends on what you mean by won't boot from DVD or Hard Drive,
it sounds like your boot order is what you're looking for help for.

To do this you need to get into your computers BIOS (or "Setup")
You can do this by rebooting the computer and the very very very first screen you see tells you how,
usually by pressing DEL or F2 or F10.

Without knowing the specific computer you're looking for help on I can only point you in the right direction however keep in mind the BIOS is for advanced users only and you can damage your computer by randomly changing settings.

What you're looking for though is usually called the Boot Order or Boot Sequence
You'll need to set whatever device you want to boot from higher on the list (usually with the up arrow or PgUp)
If you don't see your device on the boot list then it may not be detected due to failure.
Not finding what you are looking for?

1,429 views

Ask a Question

Usually answered in minutes!

Top Computers & Internet Experts

Grand Canyon Tech
Grand Canyon Tech

Level 3 Expert

3867 Answers

Brad Brown

Level 3 Expert

19187 Answers

Cindy Wells

Level 3 Expert

6688 Answers

Are you a Computer and Internet Expert? Answer questions, earn points and help others

Answer questions

Manuals & User Guides

Loading...