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What Causes Startup Problems and What Can You Do About Them

Hard Cider Index

by Ted Landau

The "?" Disk Icon or a Reappearing Happy Mac

Symptoms:

The ? disk icon remains on the screen indefinitely, or the happy Mac icon appears, disappears, and reappears in an endless loop.

Causes:

The most common cause is that the Macintosh cannot locate a valid startup disk. If so, the compter sits and stares at you with the blinking question-mark (?) disk icon, asking you to insert a startup disk and waiting until you do so. For example, this would happen if you turned on your Macintosh without a floppy disk inserted and with no hard drive connected.

If the ? disk icon persists even when a supposed startup disk is available, you have a more serious problem. Usually, the problem is with the startup hard drive. Either the disk is not connected properly (which can easily happen with an external hard drive), the software on the disk is damaged, or a hardware repair is needed.

A cycling happy-Mac icon indicates similar causes, especially damaged software. Other possible causes include incorrect SCSI connections or corrupted Parameter RAM.

What to do:

Try each of the following items, in turn, until one is successful in getting your Macintosh to start up. Remember to turn off all the devices before disconnection or reconnection any cables.

If your Startup Disk Is an External Hard Drive: Check Connections
Make sure that the external drive is connected properly to the Macintosh. Make sure the drive is on and plugged in to a power outlet. Check that all cables are firmly connected. Restart.

If Your Startup Disk Is an Internal Drive:
Disconnect Any External SCSI Devices and Restart
Disconnect the SCSI cable from the back of your Mac. If this succeeds in getting your Mac to start up, you probably have either a SCSI connection problem or a hardware problem with one or more of your external SCSI devices.

Check Indicator Lights
Most hard drives have one or two indicator lights on the front of the unit (the light is built into the front panel of the Macintosh if it is an internal drive). If there are two lights, one usually indicates that the drive is on, while the other only goes on if the drive is being accessed (reading or writing). If there is only one light, it is usually an access light. In either case, the light should go on - at least intermittently - at startup. If it does not, it means that the drive is not functioning (assuming that the light bulb itself is working okay!), and a likely hardware repair looms ahead.

Restart the Macintosh
Restart Again with the Same Disk as the Startup Disk Hopefully, the problem will disappear, in which case your troubles may be over. If it returns later, however, you may have an intermittent problem, such as stiction.

Restart with a Alternate Startup Disk If the previous restart did not work, try restarting with a alternate disk, preferably a floppy disk. If this succeeds, continue to the next step.
   By the way, if you are starting up from a floppy disk, you can still change settings of some control panels on your hard disk. For example, you could change the Startup Disk setting from an external drive (if that is its current setting) back to an internal drive for your next restart.

Check for System Folder Problems
If you can get the Macintosh to start up with an alternate startup disk, check to see if the problem disk has mounted and is now present as a secondary disk (that is, its icon is shown below the startup disk icon on the Finder's desktop). Most likely it will be there. If so, check for the following problems (using the problem disk as the startup disk, restart the Macintosh after each attempted solution to see if the problem is solved).

Make Sure a System Folder Is on the Problem Disk Okay, presumably you already know that a System Folder is there. But just in case, check anyway. If there isn't one already there, install a System Folder and start again.

Make Sure there Is Only One System Folder on the Disk Multiple System Folders (or, more technically, more than one copy of the System file and/or Finder) on your startup disk are not likely to cause startup problems, especially if you are using System 6.0.7 or later. Still, to be safe, it is good practice to delete all but the intended startup System Folder from your disk. If you are unsure whether additional System Folders are present, you can use the Finder's Find command to search for "Finder" or "System."

Bless the System Folder If Necessary Using the Icon View in the Finder, check to see if the System Folder has the mini-icon of a Macintosh on it; this is the indication that you have a blessed System Folder. The Macintosh typically does not accept a disk as a startup disk, even if it appears to have a valid System Folder on it, unless the latter is shown as a blessed System Folder.

Normally, all System Folders are blessed folders unless there is more than one on the same volume, as described just below. Occasionally, however, a problem may develop where an apparently valid System Folder is not blessed. For example, the utility System Picker unblesses otherwise valid System Folders. Similarly, if you remove the Finder or System file from a blessed System folder, it will become unblessed; replacing these files will "rebless" the folder.

Also an unblessed System Folder may be a warning signal that there is more than one System Folder on your disk. This is because a disk can have only one blessed System Folder on it, which is the one that the Macintosh actually uses when it starts up from that disk.

If the System Folder isn't blessed, open the System Folder to check if the essential files (System, Finder and possibly an Update file) are really there. If they are, remove the System file from the System Folder, then close the folder. Now open it again, replace the System file, and close the System Folder once more. This usually reblesses the System Folder. You should now see the mini-icon of the Macintosh on the folder.

Whether the mini-icon appears immediately or not, try restarting with this disk as the startup disk. The disk will most likely start up without further problems.

TECHNICALLY SPEAKING
BOOT BLOCK PROBLEMS

Corrupted or incorrect data in a disk's boot blocks are the technical reason why an apparently valid System Folder may appear as unblessed. Such a disk does not start up properly.

In some cases, the procedure described here for blessing the System folder fixes a boot block problem. Otherwise, you may have to resort to special utilities (such as Norton Utilities and MacTools) that repair boot blocks. If there is a boot block problem, these utilities find it, report the problem to you and fix it. If they cannot fix the problem, your last resort is to reformat the disk.

Replace the System and Finder If the previous steps have not worked, the System file, the Finder and/or the Update file may be damaged. TechTool and TechTool pro are useful for checking for damage to these files. Otherwise, to be safe, just replace the files. You might also try replacing the Finder Preferences file.

Check for Startup Partition Problems
If your startup disk is divided into partitions, only one of those partitions can normally act as the startup disk. If you place a System Folder on another partition and try to select it as the startup disk (via the Startup Disk control panel), it will not work. In some cases (depending on your particular disk driver and especially if the only available System Folder is on the partition that cannot act as the startup disk), the result may be that you get the cycling happy Mac. If this happens, follow the steps listed here.

Select a Different Startup Disk First, start up from a floppy startup disk. Then, if needed, install a System Folder on the partition that can act as a startup disk. Next, select that disk (or any other valid startup volume) as the startup disk from the Startup Disk control panel. (If you had used System Picker originally, you may need to use it again to select a new startup disk.) Restart.

Update Your Disk Driver Switching to a different disk driver may eliminate this cycling happy-Mac problem altogether, allowing you to start up from the previously problematic partition. In general, however, you will keep these and other related problems to a minimum by using the disk driver from the utility that was used to format your disk and by using the same utility for all of your mounted volumes.
   An incorrect or out-of-date driver can prevent startup even if the driver is on a secondary hard drive rather than the startup drive itself! All mounted drives should have correct drivers.

PowerBook 150 alert: If you replace the hard drive that comes with a PowerBook 150 with another IDE hard drive, you will likely find that you cannot use this drive as a startup disk. The reason is that the PowerBook 150 reads the disk driver from its ROM and will not start up if there is another driver on the disk itself. To get things to work, you must format the disk with the Internal HD Format utility that came with the 150. Unfortunately, if your new disk is already formatted, Internal HD Format will refuse to work. So any new hard drive you purchase must be completely unformatted, or you can use a utility such as Norton Utilities to zero out the boot blocks and partition map. Either solution will allow the disk to be reformatted.

Zap the PRAM
Parameter RAM (or PRAM) is a special type of memory that is preserved by a battery inside the Macintosh even after the computer is shut off. Some of the data stored in the PRAM relate especially to SCSI connections. If the data stored in PRAM become corrupted, they can prevent a hard disk from mounting properly. Zapping the PRAM restores the data to their default value and should solve this problem.

Battery Problems
There have been reports that if the battery installed on the logic board of your Mac (the one that maintains the PRAM setting etc.) goes dead, you may lose not only your PRAM setting but the ability to start up you Mac at all. Fortunately, replacing the battery fixes the problem so no major repair is needed.
   On some Macs, a dead battery may result in a normal startup except that the monitor display remains black. If this happens, try zapping your PRAM. If the video comes back, you probably need to replace the battery.

Make Disk Repairs
If none of the preceding solutions worked, or if the problem disk did not mount when starting up with the alternate disk - or if you could not start up at all when using a alternate disk - try the following steps.

"Repair" and Defragment the Disk If you get the blinking question-mark icon as soon as you restart after a system crash (or some other improper shutdown), you may have something called the Disk Check bug. What is happening is that the Macintosh's startup diagnostics are mistakenly reporting a damaged disk, even though the disk is fine.
to fix this, use a repair utility, such as Disk Doctor (Norton Utilties), to "repair" and mount the disk.; This disk will now work normally.
to prevent this from happening in the future, defragment you disk. Continue to defragment it on a regular basis.
   To see if you are even susceptible to this particular bug, run a freeware utility called Disk Bug Checker. Supposedly, this problem has been fixed altogether in System 7.5 and subsequent revisions.

Last Resort If none of the previous solutions worked, check for other disk damage, corrupted data, or a hardware problem. For starters, try running Disk First Aid.

Ted Landau is the author of Sad Macs, Bombs and Other Disasters, 3rd Edition published by Peachpit Press. from which this article is excerpted, was Contributing Editor for MacUser magazine, and the author of a series of troubleshooting articles for their "Hands-On" section. He is author of two previous editions of Sad Macs, Bombs, and Other Disasters, is a past winner of the BMUG Choice Product award, and has received critical praise from virtually every respected source in the Mac community. He also runs the popular troubleshooting site MacFixIt

The Material above is copyrighted and appears here courtesy of the authors and Peachpit Press

 

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