by justpassingthrough » Wed Jan 31, 2007 11:13 am
As ctjoyce says... format to NTFS
Windows rebooting with 18 minutes left sounds like either the classic memory crash, a Windows driver/component that the hardware does not like, a bad install disk or a CPU failure of some type.
If it were me, making sure the tower is not only off but unplugged from the wall, I would remove all but 1 stick of memory and try the install again. If it crashes, swap the stick in the system with one of the others you pulled out and try again. I would probably try different slots too in order to make sure i was not dealing with a memory slot that has a weak contact.
If it still crashes, I would try reducing the memory speed in the BIOS. example: If it is designed to run at DDR400 (200MHz), reduce it to DDR333 (166MHz) and install again.
If it still crashes, set the memory speed back to normal and then making sure the tower is not only off but unplugged from the wall, I would then remove every card that is not needed to boot and install, such as sound, network, TV, game port, everything but the keyboard, mouse, hard drives, CD drives and video adapter and then go into the BIOS and turn off any onboard devices such as network, sound and USB, then run the inststall again.
If it still crashes then I would suspect either a faulty Windows install disk or something about the MCE version of Windows not liking the video adapter or some other device that is still running.
Years back, if the old T-Bird AMD processors had a defective L2 cache, they would run fine in a system Windows was already installed but crash during a Windows installation. It is possible some type of processor problem is causing it but that would be rare.
If the BIOS allows you to shut down any hyperthreading options I would also try that as a last resort.