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KenB

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Everything posted by KenB

  1. Hi You should be able to do this - yes. I can see a couple of advantages: 1. You will have a much greater choice of Video cards 2. There will be more space for your Video card so there will be a better air-flow through the case. The card should run cooler. I can only see one possible problem. There are case connections that need to be connected: [ATTACH=CONFIG]611.vB5-legacyid=1298[/ATTACH] Your motherboard has been made for Acer ( it IS an Acer computer ? ) If the connections are not in the standard location the new case connections may not reach. You can always extend them. Some major suppliers tie the m/board to the case. I know Dell used to use BTX m/boards at one time - which was non-standard compared to the rest of the industry. Are there enough power connections in the new case? Some Video Cards need one or two 6 pin PCIe power connections. EDIT: I have just had another look at the case .......Is this a full-size case or another Midi one ? Are you going to be any better off ? You will have the PSU that you need but you will still be limited to the Video Cards.
  2. Hi Steph and welcome to ExTS Start > type in .......devmgmt.msc ........ENTER Click the + next to DVD CDROM Are there any yellow exclamation marks / red Xs ? What is listed ?
  3. Hi mandy I assume you did a Repair Install of XP and not a complete re-install ? It may help others if you can explain what you did to get your system up-and-running again :)
  4. You are welcome. The thread will remain open so post back if there is a further problem.
  5. I have been having a look too - very little if anything above 5400 r/m on a 2.5 inch IDE drive. I did find drives that were a bit cheaper than the one you linked to. Have a look at ebuyer.
  6. That drive would be compatible - it only runs at 5400r/m If you want a faster drive see if you can find a 7200r/m.
  7. Hi and welcome to ExTS Your original drive is a 2.5 inch IDE. There are basically 2 types. IDE ( PATA ) and the more recent SATA. The connections are totally different. Obviously you will need a compatible drive. Desktop drives are 3.5 inch. Also ...... There are 2 different speeds available. 5,400 r/m and 7,200 r/m The 7,200 transfers data considerably faster. So - you want a 2.5 inch IDE 7,200 r/m drive. I would suggest that you look at something a little bigger than 160GB - but this is obviously your choice. Hope this helps :) EDIT Our last posts crossed - 1 minute apart.
  8. Quite correct. If it is performing normally - leave it until there is a problem :)
  9. I was steering you towards the same conclusion that Randy has provided. Suspected Malware. Quick check - ( but not definitive ) Download MBAM from here: Click on "Products" > you want the free version http://www.malwarebytes.org/ Install > Update > Run It will produce a log. Copy this. Paste it here in your next reply. If this log shows anything one of our Security Experts will advise further.
  10. Hi, Take a look here: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-GB/windows-vista/Reset-Internet-Explorer-8-settings Re-set IE8 and see if that helps.
  11. Let us know the results.
  12. If you take a look at it there should be a label with the information on it. You should not be getting a burning smell - something is over-heating. Download speccy from here: http://www.piriform.com/speccy Install and run it. When the results show ......ALT + PrtSc will copy. Paste into Paint > Save as a .jpg > attach this to your next post. We still need to know what Wattage your PSU is.
  13. Hi and welcome to ExTS Disconnect external hardware ( printer etc ). I would be inclined to take all cards ( RAM / Video etc ) off the m/board. Disconnect the Hard Drive(s) and CDROM. ( Power and data cables ). Leave only the 20(4) way PSU connection on the m/board. Switch on. You should get POST beeps ( not the normal one beep ) Let it stand for a while to make sure it is stable. If it isn't then you have a m/board or PSU problem. Add the Cards / connections one at a time - allowing time to see if it is stable. When the system becomes unstable - you have found the problem piece of hardware.
  14. Hi and welcome to ExTS Which version of IE are you running?
  15. What size Power Supply Unit do you have?
  16. Thanks guys :) Apparently he is lying 4th out of 200+ entries. If he stays in the top 10 he gets to present his animation to the Wallace and Gromit team.
  17. If it isn't seeing the HDD or CDROM - try re-seating the cable at the m/board. If you have a different cable you could give that a try. Presumably the IDE drive is set to "Master" ? What happens if you disconnect the SATA drive ? If you can boot from Linux or similar then there is nothing to worry about with the BIOS regarding your CDROM drive.
  18. Hi This is probably a BIOS setting. Have a look and see if you have an option "Enhanced Mode" If you do try "PATA" as the setting.
  19. Hi Can you confirm please - do you have 2 internal drives on your system? If this is the case - Are these both SATA drives ?
  20. Hi, Good to hear that you solved one problem at least. In your first post you say that you replaced the motherboard. If you used the hard-drive with the original installation of Windows on it - it will not boot up. Windows is "clever" enough to recognise a new environment and refuse to boot up. Is this the case with your system ?
  21. Hi, Your MSI GeForce GTX 570 uses PCIe architecture as does your old card - so in this respect the new card is compatible. The specs are here: http://www.msi.com/product/vga/N570GTX-Twin-Frozr-II-OC.html#?div=Specification The new card is a wide one and will take up two slot widths. You need to make sure that you have room. The MSI GeForce GTX 570 has 2 DVI outputs - no VGA. If your present monitor has a VGA connection then you will need an adapter. The Antec high current gamer hcg 750 looks a very nice PSU http://www.antec.com/Believe_it/product.php?id=MjU5Mw== I checked and it has 4 8pin ( 6 + 2 ) PCIe power connectors. This would be enough to run 2 cards.
  22. Hi Mandy, Welcome to ExTS :)
  23. As BeeCeeBee says - if you HAVE used an old hard drive with Windows on it the system is not going to boot. The solution is a Repair Install of Windows XP You should not lose any data / files etc. but you do need the original XP installation disk. If you have it we can go from there.
  24. Take a look here: You obviously do not need the Caddy ( external drive enclosure ) you just need to take it out and replace it. Remove a panel - if you pick wrong just replace it and try another panel.
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