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    • Hi LFI, Your knowledge in this area is greater than I could possibly hope to have and as such I appreciate your feedback. In your point 1 you mention: 1] there is a real danger that some part of the appeal will point out that the person appealing [the keeper ] is also the driver. I understand the point you are making but I was referring to when the keeper is also the driver and admits it later and only in this circumstance, but I understand what you are saying. I take on board the issues you raise in point 2. Can a PPC (claimant) refer back to the case above as proof that the motorist should have appealed, like they refer back to other cases? Thanks once again for the feedback.
    • Well barristers would say that in the hope that motorists would go to them for advice -obviously paid advice.  The problem with appealing is at least twofold. 1] there is a real danger that some part of the appeal will point out that the person appealing [the keeper ] is also the driver.  And in a lot of cases the last thing the keeper wants when they are also the driver is that the parking company knows that. It makes it so much easier for them as the majority  of Judges do not accept that the keeper and the driver are the same person for obvious reasons. Often they are not the same person especially when it is a family car where the husband, wife and children are all insured to drive the same car. On top of that  just about every person who has a valid insurance policy is able to drive another person's vehicle. So there are many possibilities and it should be up to the parking company to prove it to some extent.  Most parking company's do not accept appeals under virtually any circumstances. But insist that you carry on and appeal to their so called impartial jury who are often anything but impartial. By turning down that second appeal, many motorists pay up because they don't know enough about PoFA to argue with those decisions which brings us to the second problem. 2] the major parking companies are mostly unscrupulous, lying cheating scrotes. So when you appeal and your reasons look as if they would have merit in Court, they then go about  concocting a Witness Statement to debunk that challenge. We feel that by leaving what we think are the strongest arguments to our Member's Witness Statements, it leaves insufficient time to be thwarted with their lies etc. And when the motorists defence is good enough to win, it should win regardless of when it is first produced.   
    • S13 (2)The creditor may not exercise the right under paragraph 4 to recover from the keeper any unpaid parking charges specified in the notice to keeper if, within the period of 28 days beginning with the day after that on which that notice was given, the creditor is given— (a)a statement signed by or on behalf of the vehicle-hire firm to the effect that at the material time the vehicle was hired to a named person under a hire agreement; (b)a copy of the hire agreement; and (c)a copy of a statement of liability signed by the hirer under that hire agreement. As  Arval has complied with the above they cannot be pursued by EC----- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- S14 [1]   the creditor may recover those charges (so far as they remain unpaid) from the hirer. (2)The conditions are that— (a)the creditor has within the relevant period given the hirer a notice in accordance with sub-paragraph (5) (a “notice to hirer”), together with a copy of the documents mentioned in paragraph 13(2) and the notice to keeper; (b)a period of 21 days beginning with the day on which the notice to hirer was given has elapsed;  As ECP did not send copies of the documents to your company and they have given 28 days instead of 21 days they have failed to comply with  the Act so you and your Company are absolved from paying. That is not to say that they won't continue asking to be paid as they do not have the faintest idea how PoFA works. 
    • Euro have got a lot wrong and have failed to comply with the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 Schedule 4.  According to Section 13 after ECP have written to Arval they should then send a NTH to the Hirer  which they have done.This eliminates Arval from any further pursuit by ECP. When they wrote to your company they should have sent copies of everything that they asked Arval for. This is to prove that your company agree what happened on the day of the breach. If ECP then comply with the Act they are allowed to pursue the hirer. If they fail, to comply they cannot make the hirer pay. They can pursue until they are blue in the face but the Hirer is not lawfully required to pay them and if it went to Court ECP would lose. Your company could say who was driving but the only person that can be pursued is the Hirer, there does not appear to be an extension for a driver to be pursued. Even if there was, because ECP have failed miserably to comply with the Act  they still have no chance of winning in Court. Here are the relevant Hire sections from the Act below.
    • Thank-you FTMDave for your feedback. May I take this opportunity to say that after reading numerous threads to which you are a contributor, I have great admiration for you. You really do go above and beyond in your efforts to help other people. The time you put in to help, in particular with witness statements is incredible. I am also impressed by the way in which you will defer to others with more experience should there be a particular point that you are not 100% clear on and return with answers or advice that you have sought. I wish I had the ability to help others as you do. There is another forum expert that I must also thank for his time and patience answering my questions and allowing me to come to a “penny drops” moment on one particular issue. I believe he has helped me immensely to understand and to strengthen my own case. I shall not mention who it is here at the moment just in case he would rather I didn't but I greatly appreciate the time he took working through that issue with me. I spent 20+ years of working in an industry that rules and regulations had to be strictly adhered to, indeed, exams had to be taken in order that one had to become qualified in those rules and regulations in order to carry out the duties of the post. In a way, such things as PoFA 2012 are rules and regulations that are not completely alien to me. It has been very enjoyable for me to learn these regulations and the law surrounding them. I wish I had found this forum years ago. I admit that perhaps I had been too keen to express my opinions given that I am still in the learning process. After a suitable period in this industry I became Qualified to teach the rules and regulations and I always said to those I taught that there is no such thing as a stupid question. If opinions, theories and observations are put forward, discussion can take place and as long as the result is that the student is able to clearly see where they went wrong and got to that moment where the penny drops then that is a valuable learning experience. No matter how experienced one is, there is always something to learn and if I did not know the answer to a question, I would say, I don't know the answer to that question but I will go and find out what the answer is. In any posts I have made, I have stated, “unless I am wrong” or “as far as I can see” awaiting a response telling me what I got wrong, if it was wrong. If I am wrong I am only too happy to admit it and take it as a valuable learning experience. I take the point that perhaps I should not post on other peoples threads and I shall refrain from doing so going forward. 🤐 As alluded to, circumstances can change, FTMDave made the following point that it had been boasted that no Caggers, over two years, who had sent a PPC the wrong registration snotty letter, had even been taken to court, let alone lost a court hearing .... but now they have. I too used the word "seemed" because it is true, we haven't had all the details. After perusing this forum I believe certain advice changed here after the Beavis case, I could be wrong but that is what I seem to remember reading. Could it be that after winning the above case in question, a claimant could refer back to this case and claim that a defendant had not made use of the appeal process, therefore allowing the claimant to win? Again, in this instance only, I do not know what is to be gained by not making an appeal or concealing the identity of the driver, especially if it is later admitted that the defendant was the driver and was the one to input the incorrect VRN in error. So far no one has educated me as to the reason why. But, of course, when making an appeal, it should be worded carefully so that an error in the appeal process cannot be referred back to. I thought long and hard about whether or not to post here but I wanted to bring up this point for discussion. Yes, I admit I have limited knowledge, but does that mean I should have kept silent? After I posted that I moved away from this forum slightly to find other avenues to increase my knowledge. I bought a law book and am now following certain lawyers on Youtube in the hope of arming myself with enough ammunition to use in my own case. In one video titled “7 Reasons You Will LOSE Your Court Case (and how to avoid them)” by Black Belt Barrister I believe he makes my point by saying the following, and I quote: “If you ignore the complaint in the first instance and it does eventually end up in court then it's going to look bad that you didn't co-operate in the first place. The court is not going to look kindly on you simply ignoring the company and not, let's say, availing yourself of any kind of appeal opportunities, particularly if we are talking about parking charge notices and things like that.” This point makes me think that, it is not such a bizarre judgement in the end. Only in the case of having proof of payment and inputting an incorrect VRN .... could it be worthwhile making a carefully worded appeal in the first instance? .... If the appeal fails, depending on the reason, surely this could only help if it went to court? As always, any feedback gratefully received.
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      The judge's reasoning is very useful and will certainly be helpful in any other cases relating to third-party rights where the customer has contracted with the courier company by using a broker.
      This is generally speaking the problem with using PackLink who are domiciled in Spain and very conveniently out of reach of the British justice system.

      Frankly I don't think that is any accident.

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The COMPUTER action group-help save Elsa's PC!


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Hi,

I'm reasonable well up on pc stuff, software/op system problem solving and au fait with formatting/changing RAM, hardware etc but this problem has me stumped!! Any ideas welcome :)

 

The problem:

Every time I do a COLD boot (overnight or after a few hours) Windows won't load. I get one normal post beep, then black screen:

Windows could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt: windows\system32\config\system

then usual blurb about Recovery Console.

So - I restart with XP disk, run FIXBOOT then exit and it restarts. Sometimes it then does auto CHKDSK which shows orphan files and corrupt attribute records then loads windows OK.

Stays OK all day even with restarts and turn offs...providing it's not off too long.

Very occasionally, windows DOES load on cold boot - but with reduced functionality, eg IE crashes continually , AV won't update etc, if I then restart..same error as above.

 

The system: Windows XP Pro SP3

3.40 gigahertz Intel Pentium 4

16 kilobyte primary memory cache

1024 kilobyte secondary memory cache

Board: ASUSTeK Computer INC. P5VD2-X 1.XX

Bus Clock: 200 megahertz

BIOS: Phoenix Technologies, LTD ASUS P5VD2-X ACPI BIOS Revision 0501 06/29/2007

640.12 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity

491.30 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space

 

HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-H10A [CD-ROM drive]

3.5" format removeable media [Floppy drive]

 

Hitachi HDT721032SLA360 [Hard drive] (320.07 GB) -- drive 0, Status: Healthy

ST332082 0AS USB Device [Hard drive] (320.07 GB) -- drive 1, Status: Healthy

RADEON 9200 PRO Family (Microsoft Corporation) [Display adapter]

RADEON 9200 PRO SEC Family (Microsoft Corporation) [Display adapter]

Realtek High Definition Audio

The story so far:

Problems started a couple of months ago:

The PSU started overheating a bit, then died (nothing dramatic..just clicked off and never restarted.)

Replaced PSU

On replacing, at first wouldn't start, found that 1 of the two sticks of RAM was faulty, as it ran quite happily with just 1 stick.

Ran OK for a bit then started having the boot up problems which I thought were due to a conflict with Windows update and AVG Antivirus pro.

Flashed the BIOS

Replaced old RAM with 2 new sticks

Ran loads of tests under direction of AVG techs, no improvement, in the end dumped it and formatted/reinstalled XP.

Same problem happened more and more frequently. Did several reinstalls.

Problem occurs even on a virginal install of XP, with and without updates/SP3 so it's not malware.

Tried a different XP disk to install - same problem.

Replaced Hard Drive - same problem

Replaced SATA cable - same problem

Put original (good) RAM back in - same problem

All capacitors are clean, no bulging.

That's where I am now - just working on theory that maybe on a cold boot the motherboard firing everything up cold isn't giving enough power to the RAM.

Tried just starting it and going into BIOS first, leaving it to warm up for a bit, then starting. That seems to have worked today but PC was only off for 2 hours so I'll know better in morning.

Think a new motherboard is on the cards? Maybe b**gered up a bit when the psu went?

Any other suggestions of what to try welcome!

:confused:

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It maybe your cmos battery is dead. The CMOS memory holds the BIOS settings that you define in the BIOS setup program. This memory is powered using a battery so that the settings are not lose when you turn off the power to the system. Many motherboards do not test the status of this battery and will just indicate problems with the CMOS memory when the battery fails, but some motherboards can detect when the battery is no longer functioning.

WARNING TO ALL

Please be aware of acting on advice given by PM .Anyone can make mistakes and if advice is given on the main forum people can see it to correct it ,if given privately then no one can see it to correct it. Please also be aware of giving your personal details to strangers

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The motherboard with have a "chipset" chip on it. The past 3 or 4 computers I've seen that are not working with strange / random faults it has been this chip overheating.

 

mobo.jpg

 

Can you CAREFULLY touch that after the system has been running for 1 or 2 minutes and tell me if an egg would fry on it :p (be careful 'cos egg frying is no exaggeration in the ones I've seen like this!)

If in doubt, contact a qualified insured legal professional (or my wife... she knows EVERYTHING)

 

Or send a cheque or postal order payable to Reclaim the Right Ltd.

to

923 Finchley Road London NW11 7PE

 

 

Click here if you fancy an email address that shows you mean business! (only £6 and that will really help CAG)

 

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Hi,

I'm reasonable well up on pc stuff, software/op system problem solving and au fait with formatting/changing RAM, hardware etc but this problem has me stumped!! Any ideas welcome :)

 

The problem:

Every time I do a COLD boot (overnight or after a few hours) Windows won't load. I get one normal post beep, then black screen:

Windows could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt: windows\system32\config\system

then usual blurb about Recovery Console.

So - I restart with XP disk, run FIXBOOT then exit and it restarts. Sometimes it then does auto CHKDSK which shows orphan files and corrupt attribute records then loads windows OK.

Stays OK all day even with restarts and turn offs...providing it's not off too long.

Very occasionally, windows DOES load on cold boot - but with reduced functionality, eg IE crashes continually , AV won't update etc, if I then restart..same error as above.

 

The system: Windows XP Pro SP3

3.40 gigahertz Intel Pentium 4

16 kilobyte primary memory cache

1024 kilobyte secondary memory cache

Board: ASUSTeK Computer INC. P5VD2-X 1.XX

Bus Clock: 200 megahertz

BIOS: Phoenix Technologies, LTD ASUS P5VD2-X ACPI BIOS Revision 0501 06/29/2007

640.12 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity

491.30 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space

 

HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-H10A [CD-ROM drive]

3.5" format removeable media [Floppy drive]

 

Hitachi HDT721032SLA360 [Hard drive] (320.07 GB) -- drive 0, Status: Healthy

ST332082 0AS USB Device [Hard drive] (320.07 GB) -- drive 1, Status: Healthy

RADEON 9200 PRO Family (Microsoft Corporation) [Display adapter]

RADEON 9200 PRO SEC Family (Microsoft Corporation) [Display adapter]

Realtek High Definition Audio

The story so far:

Problems started a couple of months ago:

The PSU started overheating a bit, then died (nothing dramatic..just clicked off and never restarted.)

Replaced PSU

On replacing, at first wouldn't start, found that 1 of the two sticks of RAM was faulty, as it ran quite happily with just 1 stick.

Ran OK for a bit then started having the boot up problems which I thought were due to a conflict with Windows update and AVG Antivirus pro.

Flashed the BIOS

Replaced old RAM with 2 new sticks

Ran loads of tests under direction of AVG techs, no improvement, in the end dumped it and formatted/reinstalled XP.

Same problem happened more and more frequently. Did several reinstalls.

Problem occurs even on a virginal install of XP, with and without updates/SP3 so it's not malware.

Tried a different XP disk to install - same problem.

Replaced Hard Drive - same problem

Replaced SATA cable - same problem

Put original (good) RAM back in - same problem

All capacitors are clean, no bulging.

That's where I am now - just working on theory that maybe on a cold boot the motherboard firing everything up cold isn't giving enough power to the RAM.

Tried just starting it and going into BIOS first, leaving it to warm up for a bit, then starting. That seems to have worked today but PC was only off for 2 hours so I'll know better in morning.

Think a new motherboard is on the cards? Maybe b**gered up a bit when the psu went?

Any other suggestions of what to try welcome!What you need is a posh computer with lots of windows elsa:D;)

:confused:

 

xx

Time flies like an arrow...

Fruit flies like a banana.

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What you need is a posh computer with lots of windows elsa:grin::wink:

 

No!! Computers are like air conditioning... it messes up as soon as you open windows!

If in doubt, contact a qualified insured legal professional (or my wife... she knows EVERYTHING)

 

Or send a cheque or postal order payable to Reclaim the Right Ltd.

to

923 Finchley Road London NW11 7PE

 

 

Click here if you fancy an email address that shows you mean business! (only £6 and that will really help CAG)

 

If you can't donate, please use the Internet Search boxes on the CAG pages - these will generate a small but regular income for the site

 

Please also consider using the

C.A.G. Toolbar

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Maybe b**gered up a bit when the psu went?

Any other suggestions of what to try welcome!

 

:confused:

 

 

 

 

 

my thoughts too unless the psu is underrated,

i bet one of the lines spiked when the old one went down

 

dx

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please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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No!! Computers are like air conditioning... it messes up as soon as you open windows!

 

I live with an IT man so my computer doesn't need windows to screw up, it just needs turning on!:D

Time flies like an arrow...

Fruit flies like a banana.

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Morning all :)

Lexis- no.Im definitely posher than you cos I have been installing NEW windows nearly every morning last week! :D (and windowblinds too :p )

 

Thanks guys for all the input..

 

Result of my test this morning of loading the BIOS first and letting it sit for 20 mins to warm up...successful, then booted up normally.

I'll have to try it a few more times each cold boot, alternating with a normal start up to confirm it, but looks possible that the RAMs not getting enough power on a very cold boot.

 

Dx..the PSU was upgraded from 300 to 450 after the old one died. Do you think the old one might have screwed up the motherboard? (It was fluctuatingvoltages and overheating then just clicked off )

 

Locutus - I'll try that with the chipset in the morning...too late for now as it's already been on 30 mins.

 

I'm definitely thinking a new motherboard will be needed, but I like to know what the problem is first...

 

Thanks again :)

Elsa x

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Stays OK all day even with restarts and turn offs...providing it's not off too long....

 

Any other suggestions of what to try welcome!

 

 

 

 

Not exactly a 'techie' or environmentally friendly long term solution...

Leave it switched ON ;)

...Then you can use the time it takes U to reboot etc to research your prob further on more specialised 'techie specific' forums.

:)

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:D you offering to pay my electric bill?? :D

 

I've been on every techie forum there is..but sometimes they either treat you like an idiot or get too techie and want you to run all their tests like hijack this etc before they'll even answer. I know it's not a software problem but they seem to miss that point repeatedly.

Had more useful replies on here, than in the tech forums, TBH :)

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:D you offering to pay my electric bill?? :D

 

I've been on every techie forum there is..but sometimes they either treat you like an idiot or get too techie and want you to run all their tests like hijack this etc before they'll even answer. I know it's not a software problem but they seem to miss that point repeatedly.

Had more useful replies on here, than in the tech forums, TBH :)

 

Yep..I agree..Most IT Support does initially point towards a software failure (I certainly dont think it has anything to do with anti-virus ), when in your case it would appear not to be.

 

In your case you seem to have tried everything apart from a new MB so that should be the next step, a pain it may be though.

 

Have you tried a new OS install, you mentioned a new HD so perhaps you have.

 

As for leaving it on, I always leave my PC's on, although with hibernate settings so it will be 'off/hibernating' for a lot of the time.

 

Andy

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Dx..the PSU was upgraded from 300 to 450 after the old one died. Do you think the old one might have screwed up the motherboard? (It was fluctuatingvoltages and overheating then just clicked off )

Thanks again :)

Elsa x

 

yes def.

 

i would surmise that one of the onboard regulators [either internal to a chip or one of the external ones] has failed due to spiking, and thus is not providing the voltage required from cold boot.

 

this can also be confirmed by the fact that if the PC is left on for a while, it works ok, a very small amount of charge is being delivered and the capacitor [bucket] is taking a long time to fill, but once done, the correct voltage is being seen for that part of the MB to do its job.

 

dx

Edited by dx100uk
added

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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Hi,

Andy - yep done loads of reinstalls, and even changed the XP disk, still exactly same.

 

DX - sounds spot on to me. Could try unplugging everything I feasibly can, even the DVD drive, and see if that proves the theory by lightening the boot up load.

 

Found exactly the same motherboard so going to order it tomorrow (it's been a great troublefree workhorse for last 3 yrs of doing heavy duty graphics/video/music editing) no complaints, shame if it's been parboiled

:-(

 

Then when it arrives I'll go blonde and let my son install it ;)

 

Thanks for the great help so far, everyone :)

Elsa x

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cant give u advise as i am rubbish with computers and there issues.

 

But i can wish u luck with urs and glen any useful info of the tread just in case.

OFT debt collection guidance

 

Please remember the only stupid question is the one you dont ask so dont worry about asking the stupid questions.

 

Essex girl in pc world looking 4 curtains 4 her pc,the assistant says u dont need curtains 4 a computer!!Essex girl says,''HELLOOO!! i,ve got WINDOWS!!'.

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I agree with andydd about leaving it in hibernate or standby - if you do that and make sure you turn the monitor off when you leave it (rather than leaving that in standby too) the cost is minimal. At least it was when we used OH's power meter thingy to check!

 

I can't remember how much it was exactly, but it wasn't much - and that's when we had a minimum of 2 pc's and a server connected all the time rather than just a single unit.

Time flies like an arrow...

Fruit flies like a banana.

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Hi Lexis :)

Agree, it would work, but its the underlying reason (damage) that worries me, so deffo going to replace the motherboard. Fortunately I saw it coming and got all my stuff onto my external drive, but I don't trust the pc anymore so before I start loading everything back on and working on it I want to be sure it's not going to go bosoms up

(that's a very posh word for t*ts) :D

 

Elsa x

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If you're posh enough to use the word bosoms instead of t*ts Elsa, you're posh enough to have your butler fix your PC:D

 

I have to be honest and say I have no idea about your problem and was only commenting that it didn't cost much to keep them on standby:oops:

 

My 'expertise' amounts to a bit of html that I had to learn to design some websites for my OH, and being irritated that my hard drive is yet again on my desk instead of in my PC as he's 'fixing' it again:rolleyes:

 

Never ever ever live with a techie!

Time flies like an arrow...

Fruit flies like a banana.

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:D

Oooh sounds like we do similar stuff Lexis ;)

 

I had to sack the butler, he kept eating my caviar butties, he was rubbish with computers too, just kept vaccuuming it out...

 

Since my son moved out I've had to wise up a bit to fix stuff myself (OH is the techie antichrist who uses the keyboard at 1 wpm), but if I get really stuck my son comes over to help, in return for chicken pie ;)

 

It's a bit like when your car breaks down isn't it..you never quite trust it again to set off on a long journey...

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I agree with andydd about leaving it in hibernate or standby - if you do that and make sure you turn the monitor off when you leave it (rather than leaving that in standby too) the cost is minimal. At least it was when we used OH's power meter thingy to check!

 

I can't remember how much it was exactly, but it wasn't much - and that's when we had a minimum of 2 pc's and a server connected all the time rather than just a single unit.

 

Yep..I have been sent a meter thingy by my leccy provider to try and keep my costs down as I was made redundant and ive found it usefull, I have 3 main PC's here permantly running, I have my Windows Media centre and my general use one set to hibernate and you will see the power drop by 200 watts or so each.

 

You may have to experiment a bit with the hibernate settings and also the wake up/lan settings too.. I've found that my server needs to be on permanently, hibernating it just screws everything up.

 

Andy

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Hi Andy,

I'll certainly do that once it's sorted, but I'm worried that the problem will get worse because of unknown level of damage from overheating/power spikes, so I've ordered a new Mobo today, my son will shove it in on Saturday for me (I'm better with software than hardware :-| ) then fingers crossed, Bob's my Uncle..well hopefully LOL. If I change anything else (I'm to 4 new components then) I'm going to have to ring Microsoft before I can activate Windows, so hope that's finally it!!

It's starting fine each morning providing I press DEL and go to BIOS first, go make coffee, then press F10 and boot up :)

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ring ms why?

 

dx

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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Hi DX,

Because more than 4 of the main components would be changed (it's XP Pro OEM version, quite legit but I understand the key is linked to various major components and if you change more than 4, then reinstall, windows won't activate online, a number comes up and you have to phone ms to explain)

So I understand, anyway.

 

Your theory is holding up DX, no false starts all week after prewarming in bios :)

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ah one of those.

will prob not like it when the gen adv update gets installed anyhow.

if you get troubles dont phone MS , i can sort it my way, just PM.

 

dx

please don't hit Quote...just type we know what we said earlier..

DCA's view debtors as suckers, marks and mugs

NO DCA has ANY legal powers whatsoever on ANY debt no matter what it's Type

and they

are NOT and can NEVER  be BAILIFFS. even if a debt has been to court..

If everyone stopped blindly paying DCA's Tomorrow, their industry would collapse overnight... 

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