Windows Vista Forums
Vista Forums Home Join Vista Forums Windows 7 Forum Vista Tutorials Tags
Welcome to Windows Vista Forums. Our forum is dedicated to helping you find solutions with any problems, errors or issues you are experiencing with Windows Vista. The Vista forum also covers news and updates and has an extensive Windows Vista tutorial section that covers a wide range of tips and tricks.

Go Back   Vista Forums > Vista Newsgroups > Vista installation & setup

Vista - BSOD at end of installation

Reply
 
Old 02-23-2008   #1 (permalink)
petermcmillan_uk


 
 

BSOD at end of installation

I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
it's hard to read the message.

Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.

At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
(. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
whole reason for buying the computer.

My hardware is:
Asus 380W PSU
ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
LG PATA DVD writer
Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD

My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #2 (permalink)
philo


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation


<petermcmillan_uk@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
it's hard to read the message.

Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.

At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
(. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
whole reason for buying the computer.

My hardware is:
Asus 380W PSU
ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
LG PATA DVD writer
Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD

Did you install the chipset drivers?

Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered

see: "desperate"


My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #3 (permalink)
petermcmillan_uk


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation

On 23 Feb, 18:10, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

> <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>
> news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
> I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. *The
> installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
> supposed to). *When it comes back it does the 'completing
> installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
> get any further with the install. *It reboots itself very quickly so
> it's hard to read the message.
>
> Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? *Does
> it have a look at the hardware? *Or does anybody know how to fix it?
> I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
> reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.
>
> At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
> (. *Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
> whole reason for buying the computer.
>
> My hardware is:
> Asus 380W PSU
> ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
> AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
> Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
> LG PATA DVD writer
> Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD
>
> Did you install the chipset drivers?
>
> Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered
>
> see: "desperate"
I've got further now, and installed it. I tried, but I couldn't
install any drivers until after the install. I changed the memory
voltage from 'auto' to 1.9V, which I thought may have fixed it, but it
may just been luck because I keep getting a BSOD every few minutes
even when not doing much.

It looks like a hardware fault (not really the right group). I ran
the memory test from the Vista DVD and there were no errors. Does
that mean the memory should be OK or does it not stress the memory
enough? My first BSOD was at the login screen before logging in, and
it didn't crash during the performance tests either. The first two
BSODs were something about modifying internal data structures IIRC,
and the last was memory management. The only other posibility I can
think of is the processor having a hot spot if the thermal pad got
messed up (although I doubt it)?
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #4 (permalink)
philo


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation


<petermcmillan_uk@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:6ebc9955-5ad9-4e68-b103-ecd48f38b5f6@xxxxxx
On 23 Feb, 18:10, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

> <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>
> news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
> I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
> installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
> supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
> installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
> get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
> it's hard to read the message.
>
> Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
> it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
> I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
> reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.
>
> At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
> (. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
> whole reason for buying the computer.
>
> My hardware is:
> Asus 380W PSU
> ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
> AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
> Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
> LG PATA DVD writer
> Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD
>
> Did you install the chipset drivers?
>
> Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered
>
> see: "desperate"
I've got further now, and installed it. I tried, but I couldn't
install any drivers until after the install. I changed the memory
voltage from 'auto' to 1.9V, which I thought may have fixed it, but it
may just been luck because I keep getting a BSOD every few minutes
even when not doing much.

It looks like a hardware fault (not really the right group). I ran
the memory test from the Vista DVD and there were no errors. Does
that mean the memory should be OK or does it not stress the memory
enough? My first BSOD was at the login screen before logging in, and
it didn't crash during the performance tests either. The first two
BSODs were something about modifying internal data structures IIRC,
and the last was memory management. The only other posibility I can
think of is the processor having a hot spot if the thermal pad got
messed up (although I doubt it)?


I've found that occasionally, a memory test utility will pass RAM
that still turns out to be marginal.

Rather than changing the voltage, for now, just try clocking down the RAM to
see what happens.

I agree that the thermal pad probably is OK...
but you should check the cpu temp



My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #5 (permalink)
petermcmillan_uk


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation

On 23 Feb, 20:08, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

> <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>
> news:6ebc9955-5ad9-4e68-b103-ecd48f38b5f6@xxxxxx
> On 23 Feb, 18:10, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
Quote:

> > <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>
Quote:

> >news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
> > I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
> > installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
> > supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
> > installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
> > get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
> > it's hard to read the message.
>
Quote:

> > Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
> > it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
> > I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
> > reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.
>
Quote:

> > At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
> > (. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
> > whole reason for buying the computer.
>
Quote:

> > My hardware is:
> > Asus 380W PSU
> > ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
> > AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
> > Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
> > LG PATA DVD writer
> > Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD
>
Quote:

> > Did you install the chipset drivers?
>
Quote:

> > Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered
>
Quote:

> > see: "desperate"
>
> I've got further now, and installed it. *I tried, but I couldn't
> install any drivers until after the install. *I changed the memory
> voltage from 'auto' to 1.9V, which I thought may have fixed it, but it
> may just been luck because I keep getting a BSOD every few minutes
> even when not doing much.
>
> It looks like a hardware fault (not really the right group). *I ran
> the memory test from the Vista DVD and there were no errors. *Does
> that mean the memory should be OK or does it not stress the memory
> enough? *My first BSOD was at the login screen before logging in, and
> it didn't crash during the performance tests either. *The first two
> BSODs were something about modifying internal data structures IIRC,
> and the last was memory management. *The only other posibility I can
> think of is the processor having a hot spot if the thermal pad got
> messed up (although I doubt it)?
>
> I've found that occasionally, a memory test utility will pass RAM
> that still turns out to be marginal.
>
> Rather than changing the voltage, for now, just try clocking down the RAM to
> see what happens.
>
> I agree that the thermal pad probably is OK...
> but you should check the cpu temp- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Looking in the BIOS, the temperatures are VERY low. All below 30C,
although the CPU was at 14C earlier, which is below room temperature.
I might try that with the RAM, I paid a bit extra for this RAM because
I thought it was a good brand and didn't want any problems lol.
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #6 (permalink)
philo


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation


<petermcmillan_uk@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:e529295f-52b8-4d55-9649-abe7027f4259@xxxxxx
On 23 Feb, 20:08, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

> <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>
> news:6ebc9955-5ad9-4e68-b103-ecd48f38b5f6@xxxxxx
> On 23 Feb, 18:10, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
Quote:

> > <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>
Quote:

> >news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
> > I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
> > installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
> > supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
> > installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
> > get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
> > it's hard to read the message.
>
Quote:

> > Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
> > it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
> > I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
> > reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.
>
Quote:

> > At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
> > (. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
> > whole reason for buying the computer.
>
Quote:

> > My hardware is:
> > Asus 380W PSU
> > ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
> > AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
> > Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
> > LG PATA DVD writer
> > Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD
>
Quote:

> > Did you install the chipset drivers?
>
Quote:

> > Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered
>
Quote:

> > see: "desperate"
>
> I've got further now, and installed it. I tried, but I couldn't
> install any drivers until after the install. I changed the memory
> voltage from 'auto' to 1.9V, which I thought may have fixed it, but it
> may just been luck because I keep getting a BSOD every few minutes
> even when not doing much.
>
> It looks like a hardware fault (not really the right group). I ran
> the memory test from the Vista DVD and there were no errors. Does
> that mean the memory should be OK or does it not stress the memory
> enough? My first BSOD was at the login screen before logging in, and
> it didn't crash during the performance tests either. The first two
> BSODs were something about modifying internal data structures IIRC,
> and the last was memory management. The only other posibility I can
> think of is the processor having a hot spot if the thermal pad got
> messed up (although I doubt it)?
>
> I've found that occasionally, a memory test utility will pass RAM
> that still turns out to be marginal.
>
> Rather than changing the voltage, for now, just try clocking down the RAM
to
Quote:

> see what happens.
>
> I agree that the thermal pad probably is OK...
> but you should check the cpu temp- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Looking in the BIOS, the temperatures are VERY low. All below 30C,
although the CPU was at 14C earlier, which is below room temperature.
I might try that with the RAM, I paid a bit extra for this RAM because
I thought it was a good brand and didn't want any problems lol.


If your system is stable with the RAM underclocked, then the RAM must be
bad...
but of course, at this point it's hard to tell


My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #7 (permalink)
Stephen Petrowski


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation

he needs to install the sata driver chip softwear before installing windows
"philo" <philo@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OmWnZsldIHA.5348@xxxxxx
Quote:

>
> <petermcmillan_uk@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:e529295f-52b8-4d55-9649-abe7027f4259@xxxxxx
> On 23 Feb, 20:08, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

>> <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>
>> news:6ebc9955-5ad9-4e68-b103-ecd48f38b5f6@xxxxxx
>> On 23 Feb, 18:10, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
Quote:

>> > <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>
Quote:

>> >news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
>> > I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
>> > installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
>> > supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
>> > installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
>> > get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
>> > it's hard to read the message.
>>
Quote:

>> > Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
>> > it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
>> > I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
>> > reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.
>>
Quote:

>> > At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
>> > (. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
>> > whole reason for buying the computer.
>>
Quote:

>> > My hardware is:
>> > Asus 380W PSU
>> > ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
>> > AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
>> > Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
>> > LG PATA DVD writer
>> > Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD
>>
Quote:

>> > Did you install the chipset drivers?
>>
Quote:

>> > Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered
>>
Quote:

>> > see: "desperate"
>>
>> I've got further now, and installed it. I tried, but I couldn't
>> install any drivers until after the install. I changed the memory
>> voltage from 'auto' to 1.9V, which I thought may have fixed it, but it
>> may just been luck because I keep getting a BSOD every few minutes
>> even when not doing much.
>>
>> It looks like a hardware fault (not really the right group). I ran
>> the memory test from the Vista DVD and there were no errors. Does
>> that mean the memory should be OK or does it not stress the memory
>> enough? My first BSOD was at the login screen before logging in, and
>> it didn't crash during the performance tests either. The first two
>> BSODs were something about modifying internal data structures IIRC,
>> and the last was memory management. The only other posibility I can
>> think of is the processor having a hot spot if the thermal pad got
>> messed up (although I doubt it)?
>>
>> I've found that occasionally, a memory test utility will pass RAM
>> that still turns out to be marginal.
>>
>> Rather than changing the voltage, for now, just try clocking down the RAM
> to
Quote:

>> see what happens.
>>
>> I agree that the thermal pad probably is OK...
>> but you should check the cpu temp- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
>
> Looking in the BIOS, the temperatures are VERY low. All below 30C,
> although the CPU was at 14C earlier, which is below room temperature.
> I might try that with the RAM, I paid a bit extra for this RAM because
> I thought it was a good brand and didn't want any problems lol.
>
>
> If your system is stable with the RAM underclocked, then the RAM must be
> bad...
> but of course, at this point it's hard to tell
>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #8 (permalink)
philo


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation


"Stephen Petrowski" <bsa2002@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23FTe7BmdIHA.5200@xxxxxx
Quote:

> he needs to install the sata driver chip softwear before installing
windows

yes. That was already mentioned but it looks like he got past that point now

Quote:

> "philo" <philo@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:OmWnZsldIHA.5348@xxxxxx
Quote:

> >
> > <petermcmillan_uk@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> >
news:e529295f-52b8-4d55-9649-abe7027f4259@xxxxxx
Quote:
Quote:

> > On 23 Feb, 20:08, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

> >> <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> >>
> >>
news:6ebc9955-5ad9-4e68-b103-ecd48f38b5f6@xxxxxx
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:

> >> On 23 Feb, 18:10, "philo" <ph...@xxxxxx> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> > <petermcmillan...@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> >>
> >>
>news:d8c32f6d-8258-4abc-9a7c-5832ae2aaedb@xxxxxx
Quote:
Quote:

> >> > I've just built a new computer with 64bit Vista Home Premium. The
> >> > installation goes through its bits and then reboots itself (as it's
> >> > supposed to). When it comes back it does the 'completing
> >> > installation' stage, but during this it gives me a BSOD and I can't
> >> > get any further with the install. It reboots itself very quickly so
> >> > it's hard to read the message.
> >>
> >> > Any ideas what happens in the 'completing installation' stage? Does
> >> > it have a look at the hardware? Or does anybody know how to fix it?
> >> > I haven't got any unusual hardware (apart from a USB memory card
> >> > reader) in there so I wouldn't expect driver problems.
> >>
> >> > At the moment I've spent £hundreds for a machine that does nothing :
> >> > (. Windows XP isn't really an option either because Vista was the
> >> > whole reason for buying the computer.
> >>
> >> > My hardware is:
> >> > Asus 380W PSU
> >> > ASUS M2A-VM HDMI Motherboard (inc sound + video)
> >> > AMD BE-2350 Processor (dual core - 64 bit)
> >> > Corsair XMS2 800MHz DDR2 2Gb
> >> > LG PATA DVD writer
> >> > Western Digital SATA 160Gb 7200rpm HD
> >>
> >> > Did you install the chipset drivers?
> >>
> >> > Look at the post from yesterday as that was covered
> >>
> >> > see: "desperate"
> >>
> >> I've got further now, and installed it. I tried, but I couldn't
> >> install any drivers until after the install. I changed the memory
> >> voltage from 'auto' to 1.9V, which I thought may have fixed it, but it
> >> may just been luck because I keep getting a BSOD every few minutes
> >> even when not doing much.
> >>
> >> It looks like a hardware fault (not really the right group). I ran
> >> the memory test from the Vista DVD and there were no errors. Does
> >> that mean the memory should be OK or does it not stress the memory
> >> enough? My first BSOD was at the login screen before logging in, and
> >> it didn't crash during the performance tests either. The first two
> >> BSODs were something about modifying internal data structures IIRC,
> >> and the last was memory management. The only other posibility I can
> >> think of is the processor having a hot spot if the thermal pad got
> >> messed up (although I doubt it)?
> >>
> >> I've found that occasionally, a memory test utility will pass RAM
> >> that still turns out to be marginal.
> >>
> >> Rather than changing the voltage, for now, just try clocking down the
RAM
Quote:
Quote:

> > to
Quote:

> >> see what happens.
> >>
> >> I agree that the thermal pad probably is OK...
> >> but you should check the cpu temp- Hide quoted text -
> >>
> >> - Show quoted text -
> >
> > Looking in the BIOS, the temperatures are VERY low. All below 30C,
> > although the CPU was at 14C earlier, which is below room temperature.
> > I might try that with the RAM, I paid a bit extra for this RAM because
> > I thought it was a good brand and didn't want any problems lol.
> >
> >
> > If your system is stable with the RAM underclocked, then the RAM must be
> > bad...
> > but of course, at this point it's hard to tell
> >
> >
>

My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #9 (permalink)
petermcmillan_uk


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation

>
Quote:

> If your system is stable with the RAM underclocked, then the RAM must be
> bad...
> but of course, at this point it's hard to tell- Hide quoted text -
>
I'm on my Vista machine now and it seems to be working . I set the
DDR to 667MHz rather than auto. It looks like the memory doesn't work
at its rated spec (800MHz). It's really annoying because I paid quite
a bit extra for 800Mhz, and even more for Corsair. It's not really
worth the hassle and cost of getting a replacement. So I'll probably
just stick with it at 667MHz

I'm hoping that it won't suddenly die completely. The motherboard
temperature monitor seems to be useless though. At the moment the CPU
is at 12C, but the room must be at least 18C. It's a pretty rubbish
computer really. I'm already starting to hate Vista too. I'll
probably end up using my faster Windows XP machine, which is less than
half as powerful.
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 02-23-2008   #10 (permalink)
philo


 
 

Re: BSOD at end of installation


<petermcmillan_uk@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:667f87d5-140a-4cc6-af61-286a10fc40c9@xxxxxx
Quote:
Quote:

> >
> > If your system is stable with the RAM underclocked, then the RAM must be
> > bad...
> > but of course, at this point it's hard to tell- Hide quoted text -
> >
>
> I'm on my Vista machine now and it seems to be working . I set the
> DDR to 667MHz rather than auto. It looks like the memory doesn't work
> at its rated spec (800MHz). It's really annoying because I paid quite
> a bit extra for 800Mhz, and even more for Corsair. It's not really
> worth the hassle and cost of getting a replacement. So I'll probably
> just stick with it at 667MHz
>
> I'm hoping that it won't suddenly die completely. The motherboard
> temperature monitor seems to be useless though. At the moment the CPU
> is at 12C, but the room must be at least 18C. It's a pretty rubbish
> computer really. I'm already starting to hate Vista too. I'll
> probably end up using my faster Windows XP machine, which is less than
> half as powerful.
Too bad the RAM does not work at it's rating...
but glad you at least got the system up and running.

Though I am still evaluating Vista here...
not of my hardware is really good enough,
so I mostly use Win2k, XP and Linux .

I'd think that once you get your system fine-tuned, it should run Vista
pretty well though


My System SpecsSystem Spec
Reply

Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Forum
BSOD Before Installation Vista installation & setup
installation bsod... Vista installation & setup
BSOD at the end of installation Vista installation & setup
RC1 Vista 64 BSOD at end of Installation Vista installation & setup
BSOD installation - PNF_LIST_CORRUPT Vista installation & setup


Vista Forums is an independent web site and has not been authorized,
sponsored, or otherwise approved by Microsoft Corporation.
"Windows Vista", the Start Orb, and related materials are trademarks of Microsoft Corp.
© Designer Media Ltd

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46