Interference When Installing Windows XP

2

I had several problems on my old pc, so I decided to reinstall Windows XP. The problem is, when it copies the files, I get a lot of errors with Windows XP setup cannot copy file, so I ignore all of them, as enter will not do. Then, when it finishes copying, I get a blue screen of death with the error BAD_POOL_CALLER, with technical information :

STOP 0x000000C2 (0x00000007, 0x00000CD4, 0x00000000, 0xE1EE38E8).

I tried to install from another windows cd and I got the same errors. What should I do? It all started when Windows XP was updating and I accidentally took the PC off the switch. What should I do? Thanks in advance!

windows-xp
installation
bsod
asked on Super User Jun 26, 2012 by Eka Anggraini • edited Jun 26, 2012 by avirk

2 Answers

0

windows xp copies files to your hard drive before attempting install. if your hard drive is bad it would fail to copy consistently, and in the process break the install

answered on Super User Jun 26, 2012 by steve
0

The BAD_POOL_CALLER bug check that you've received has a value of 0x000000C2. This indicates that the current thread is making a bad pool request.

You can refer to the MSDN WIndows - Bug Check 0xC2: BAD_POOL_CALLER to identify the codes that you've received.

I would say that you either have:

  • some external device connected that's causing the error
  • bad ram modules

e.g., Removing a USB device without using the Safely remove USB devices can be sufficient to get that error.


Some Guidance:

  1. Disconnect all external devices (printers, USB devices, etc...) and then boot up.

    If this corrects the issue, connect the devices one at a time until you discover the piece of hardware causing the issue. An updated driver\software for the device should fix it.

  2. Use the Last known good configuration from the Windows Advanced Options menu.

    If this option resolves the issue then look for any recent updates, or recently installed software that may have caused this problem.

  3. Boot to Safe Mode from the Windows Advanced Options menu.

    If you can enter windows using safe mode, the issue is most likely related with a driver or software.

    From within Safe Mode run a System Restore. (article with instruction here)

  4. Perform a Clean Boot.

    Step by Step article to troubleshoot with a Clean Boot. Also, an Advanced troubleshooting Guide!


As I've recommend on this answer, you should use an Ubuntu live CD to boot and run some tests on your computer.

answered on Super User Jun 27, 2012 by Zuul • edited Mar 20, 2017 by Community

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