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STOP 7E in booting WinXP Pro
Hello,
I am trying to troubleshoot a stop 7E error for a WinXP installation for an end user who is located overseas. We had identical hardware testing the system. We sent them the hard drive that was a clone of our system. When they installed the drive and booted their system, they received the following STOP message: STOP 7E (0xC0000005, 0xF7637750, 0xF78A242C,0xF78A2128) STOP 7E The module listed is LVUSBSTA.SYS, which is a Logitech filter driver. We had identical setups (same motherboard, same video card, same everything). That's what gets me. They even plugged the USB devices in the same order as we had them on our system. They have also tried to boot again and sometimes they get the 7E without any device driver or .sys file listed. The only thing I can think is the memory is bad, or a video card driver issue, but the video card driver issue doesn't seem right either. I've looked at: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/330182 Any other ideas to resolve this? Thanks Mike |
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Re: STOP 7E in booting WinXP Pro
>I am trying to troubleshoot a stop 7E error for a WinXP installation
>for an end user who is located overseas. We had identical hardware >testing the system. We sent them the hard drive that was a clone of >our system. When they installed the drive and booted their system, >they received the following STOP message: > >STOP 7E (0xC0000005, 0xF7637750, 0xF78A242C,0xF78A2128) > >STOP 7E The module listed is LVUSBSTA.SYS, which is a Logitech >filter driver. We had identical setups (same motherboard, same video >card, same everything). That's what gets me. They even plugged the USB >devices in the same order as we had them on our system. > >They have also tried to boot again and sometimes they get the 7E >without any device driver or .sys file listed. > > >The only thing I can think is the memory is bad, or a video card >driver issue, but the video card driver issue doesn't seem right >either. > > >I've looked at: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/330182 > >Any other ideas to resolve this? > >Thanks >Mike Since Win95, mice don't really need drivers. These whiz-bang extra the mice makers throw in to extend the "functionality" of a mouse is retarded. See if your customer can remove the Logitech mouse software or perhaps see if there is an update version of the drivers. - Thee Chicago Wolf |
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Re: STOP 7E in booting WinXP Pro
"eljainc" <eljainc@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:a755acd4-47f1-4f1a-a3b5-72d333911cac@f10g2000hsf.googlegroups.com... > Hello, > > I am trying to troubleshoot a stop 7E error for a WinXP installation > for an end user who is located overseas. We had identical hardware > testing the system. We sent them the hard drive that was a clone of > our system. When they installed the drive and booted their system, > they received the following STOP message: > > STOP 7E (0xC0000005, 0xF7637750, 0xF78A242C,0xF78A2128) > > STOP 7E The module listed is LVUSBSTA.SYS, which is a Logitech > filter driver. We had identical setups (same motherboard, same video > card, same everything). That's what gets me. They even plugged the USB > devices in the same order as we had them on our system. > > They have also tried to boot again and sometimes they get the 7E > without any device driver or .sys file listed. > > > The only thing I can think is the memory is bad, or a video card > driver issue, but the video card driver issue doesn't seem right > either. > > > I've looked at: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/330182 > > Any other ideas to resolve this? > > Thanks > Mike > Several years ago I did much the same thing as you did, believing that the second machine was virtually a physical clone of the first. Alas this was not so: There were some subtle differences on the motherboard, causing Windows to crash at each reboot. Here are a couple of options to fix the problem: - Get the end user to perform a repair installation by booting the machine with his WinXP CD. - Install Acronis TrueImage Universal Restore on your machine, then create a new image. Send him this image on a DVD together with your Acronis Recovery CD. In each case you would have to do a few practice runs so that you can guide your end user through the process with confidence. |
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