sorcerer
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 77
- Location
- Preston, Lancs, UK
All computer shops around here offer 'No Fix - No Fee' so I had to as well or I just wouldn't get any work. A regular client called me a couple of weeks ago to say that her Windows 8.1 laptop kept BSODing, so I had a look. The laptop was set to save minidumps but actually wasn't doing it, so there were no previous dumps to look at. On top of that, the fault was very intermittent - I had it on the bench for five days, running all sorts of tests and stressing it out but it only blue-screened on me once in that time and again, did not create a dump file to read, even though it was set to do so - and I'll admit that that in itself had me stumped. I don't know why it wasn't creating and saving a dump file, nor do I have any clue or idea of how to make it do it. What do you think?
I don't like admitting defeat but I eventually had to because I just couldn't find anything wrong. She ended up taking it elsewhere and the technician there diagnosed a faulty hard drive and installed a new one.
During my hardware diagnostics procedure, I always run an extended GSmartControl test and in this case, it completed without any errors. There were no previous errors logged, no attributes highlighted in red or anything, just a clean, error-free result. I also usually run HDDScan v3.3 too and again, no errors, no bad or even slow-responding sectors were found. In other words, the result of my testing showed a good hard drive with no cause for concern.
My question to you venerable folks is, what tool do you think this other tech would have been using to come to the conclusion that the HDD was at fault, because whatever it is, I think I need it in my toolkit.
The client has only had the laptop back for a couple of days so I suppose time will tell if his diagnosis was correct or not. She's booked me to go and install her printer etc., and get it all set up for her as she likes it, so at least I know I haven't permanently lost a client there
I don't like admitting defeat but I eventually had to because I just couldn't find anything wrong. She ended up taking it elsewhere and the technician there diagnosed a faulty hard drive and installed a new one.
During my hardware diagnostics procedure, I always run an extended GSmartControl test and in this case, it completed without any errors. There were no previous errors logged, no attributes highlighted in red or anything, just a clean, error-free result. I also usually run HDDScan v3.3 too and again, no errors, no bad or even slow-responding sectors were found. In other words, the result of my testing showed a good hard drive with no cause for concern.
My question to you venerable folks is, what tool do you think this other tech would have been using to come to the conclusion that the HDD was at fault, because whatever it is, I think I need it in my toolkit.
The client has only had the laptop back for a couple of days so I suppose time will tell if his diagnosis was correct or not. She's booked me to go and install her printer etc., and get it all set up for her as she likes it, so at least I know I haven't permanently lost a client there