I'd have to agree with James, take out all the addons you can, install, and once it's working somewhat start adding them back in one-by-one. As a starting point, I'd make sure you have the most recent BIOS of your mobo, and verify the settings in there too.. then if that doesn't work I'd start doing the Frankenstein :) Good luck! Chris --------------- Chris Eubank ***Any opinions contained in this e-mail message are solely that of the author and do not in any way, directly or indirectly, represent my employer, real or imagined. ***Caution, *nix powered air conditioner, do not open windows! -----Original Message----- From: fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of James Wilkinson Sent: August 24, 2004 5:11 AM To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: MB failure? Crazy Rusty wrote: > Working with FC2.. > > Comp crashed. Had it force the sys integ check. > > Comes back with something that (at the end) says. > > Code: (blah blah blah.) > > <0> Kernel panic: Fatal exception in interrupt > > In interrupt handler - not synching > > I found one post through google that said to hit esc as soon as I see the > lilo screen but I am a noob and I don't know what a lilo is! The Fedora equivalent is grub. It's the screen that appears immediately after all the BIOS screens, and lets you choose which kernel and/or OS to boot. You might want to press "e" to edit the command line, but without seeing the advice, I can't tell. > I am almost sure it's a motherboard issue. FC2 took 14 hours to install. > Windows never even made it that far, it used to fail during cd boot and say > "Page fault in non paged area" and something else about an IRQ. I am using > an Asus P4T socket 423 board. The ram is good so I thought I would check to > see if anyone concurred that it's the mb. How do you know the memory is good? Since you can't install to Windows either, it sounds a good bet that it's hardware. If the system has any add-in cards (apart from your primary graphics card), you could try taking them out. Otherwise, I'd look at the CPU, the memory, the motherboard, the CD, the hard drive, the cables, the cooling, or possibly any add-in IDE or SCSI adapter cards. And it's most likely to be the motherboard. James. -- E-mail address: james | It is a mistake to allow any mechanical object to @westexe.demon.co.uk | realise that you are in a hurry. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list