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June 07, 2025, 05:13:03 am

Author Topic: Continuous restarting  (Read 2225 times)  Share 

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ed_saifa

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Continuous restarting
« on: May 17, 2008, 04:52:58 pm »
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Hey
Can anyone please help me with a slight problem? My computer is continuously restarting; just before it restarts the following message appears on a blue screen
STOP: C0000221{Bad Image Checksum} The image urlmon.d11 is possibly corrupt.  The header checksum does not match the computer checksum
I've tried going into safe mode but it still keeps restarting.
Thanks
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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #1 on: May 17, 2008, 05:07:11 pm »
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blue screen? =S

blue screen of death? !
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AppleXY

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #2 on: May 17, 2008, 05:08:42 pm »
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It might be a driver issue... lol ahh yes the windows trademark BSoD :)

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droodles

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #3 on: May 17, 2008, 05:11:32 pm »
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It could be two things:
- Dust accumulating in your PC and it's interfering with the parts from properly functionning
-Bad RAM or a bad graphics card

What were you doing prior to this happening?

DrowNz

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #4 on: May 17, 2008, 05:11:49 pm »
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This sort of a problem is often associated with faulty hardware. If I was in your position, assuming you have more than one memory stick, I'd try to remove one at a time to check if the problem persists. If it does, I'd try the same with my gfx card (burrow one of a mate?). Next step would be try and format your PC in the hope that it's a software issue. If that too doesn't help, i'd advice you to get some sort of hardware diagnosis to spot out what you are dealing with.
« Last Edit: May 17, 2008, 05:14:02 pm by DrowNz »
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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2008, 05:14:22 pm »
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Boot from a livecd and see if the computer still fails. If it doesn't, you can theorise that the problem exists with Windows, which may require you to reinstall/restore.

AppleXY

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #6 on: May 17, 2008, 05:15:06 pm »
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You need to replace the single file, using Emergency Recovery Disk (ERD) if you have one (like HP sys. recovery) but this will remove your user accounts. Also, reset BIOS to default and it might resolve the Checksum issue.

- Bad Ram
- Missing Driver
- Corrupted Page File.

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ed_saifa

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #7 on: May 17, 2008, 08:52:15 pm »
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But i've survived so long with this computer. If all else fails, i'll just chuck in the ghost disk i created years ago.
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"It's not a community effort"
"It's not allowed. Only death is a valid excuse"
"Probably for the first time time this year I was totally flabbergasted by some of the 'absolute junk' I had to correct .... I was going to use 'crap' but that was too kind a word"
"How can you expect to do well when
-you draw a lemon as having two half-cells connected with a salt bridge
-your lemons come with Cu2+ ions built in" - Dwyer
"Why'd you score so bad?!" - Zotos
"Your arguments are seri

droodles

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #8 on: May 17, 2008, 09:21:26 pm »
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ed saifa its all a part of life i feel your pain g

gfb

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #9 on: May 18, 2008, 12:56:10 am »
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But i've survived so long with this computer. If all else fails, i'll just chuck in the ghost disk i created years ago.

Open the side panel of the pc, clean everything and check that every part is in place.

excal

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Re: Continuous restarting
« Reply #10 on: May 19, 2008, 02:10:08 am »
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Bug Check 0xC0000221: STATUS_IMAGE_CHECKSUM_MISMATCH
The STATUS_IMAGE_CHECKSUM_MISMATCH bug check has a value of 0xC0000221. This indicates that a driver or a system DLL has been corrupted.

Cause
This bug check results from a serious error in a driver or other system file. The file header checksum does not match the expected checksum.

This can also be caused by faulty hardware in the I/O path to the file (a disk error, faulty RAM, or a corrupted page file).

Resolving the Problem
To remedy this error, run the Emergency Recovery Disk (ERD) and allow the system to repair or replace the missing or damaged driver file on the system partition.

You can also run an in-place upgrade over the existing copy of Windows. This preserves all registry settings and configuration information, but replaces all system files. If any Service Packs and/or hotfixes had previously been applied, you need to reinstall them afterward in the appropriate order (latest Service Pack, then any post-Service Pack hotfixes in the order in which they were originally installed, if applicable).

If a specific file was identified in the bug check message as being corrupted, you can try replacing that individual file manually. If the system partition is formatted with FAT, you can start from an MS-DOS startup disk and copy the file from the original source onto the hard disk. If you have a dual-boot machine, you can boot to your other operating system and replace the file.

If you want to replace the file on a single-boot system with an NTFS partition, you need to restart the system, press F8 at the operating system Loader menu, and choose Safe Mode with Command Prompt. From there, copy a fresh version of the file from the original source onto the hard disk. If the file is used as part of the system startup process in Safe Mode, you need to start the computer using the Recovery Console in order to access the file. If these methods fail, try reinstalling Windows and then restoring the system from a backup.

Note  If the original file from the product CD has a filename extension ending in an _ (underscore), the file needs to be uncompressed before it can be used. The Recovery Console's Copy command automatically detects compressed files and expands them as they are copied to the target location. If you are using Safe Mode to access a drive, use the Expand command to uncompress and copy the file to the target folder. You can use the Expand command in the command line environment of Safe Mode.

Resolving a disk error problem: Disk errors can be a source of file corruption. Run Chkdsk /f /r to detect and resolve any file system structural corruption. You must restart the system before the disk scan begins on a system partition.

Resolving a RAM problem: If the error occurred immediately after RAM was added to the system, the paging file might be corrupted or the new RAM itself might be either faulty or incompatible.

To determine if newly added RAM is causing a bug check

> Return the system to the original RAM configuration.
> Use the Recovery Console to access the partition containing the paging file and delete the file pagefile.sys.
> While still in the Recovery Console, run Chkdsk /r on the partition that contained the paging file.
> Restart the system.
> Set the paging file to an optimal level for the amount of RAM added.
> Shutdown the system and add your RAM.

The new RAM must meet the system manufacturer's specifications for speed, parity, and type (that is, fast page-mode (FPM) versus extended data out (EDO) versus synchronous dynamic random access memory (SDRAM)). Try to match the new RAM to the existing installed RAM as closely as possible. RAM can come in many different capacities, and more importantly, in different formats (single inline memory modules — SIMM — or dual inline memory modules — DIMM). The electrical contacts can be either gold or tin and it is not wise to mix these contact types.

If you experience the same error message after reinstalling the new RAM, run hardware diagnostics supplied by the system manufacturer, especially the memory scanner. For details on these procedures, see the owner's manual for your computer.

When you can log on to the system again, check the System Log in Event Viewer for additional error messages that might help pinpoint the device or driver that is causing the error.

Disabling memory caching of the BIOS might also resolve this error.

[/copypasta]

tl;dr probable RAM issue. Try reinstalling Windows (NOT using the Quick Format option - to rule out HDD corruption). If this fails, you probably have a dead stick of RAM. If so:

This sort of a problem is often associated with faulty hardware. If I was in your position, assuming you have more than one memory stick, I'd try to remove one at a time to check if the problem persists. If it does, I'd try the same with my gfx card (burrow one of a mate?). Next step would be try and format your PC in the hope that it's a software issue. If that too doesn't help, i'd advice you to get some sort of hardware diagnosis to spot out what you are dealing with.

« Last Edit: May 19, 2008, 02:12:46 am by Excalibur »
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