DELL 3000 ユーザーズマニュアル

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Troubleshooting Your Computer
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and press <Enter>. Does MS-DOS display the 
root directory contents for drive D?
Yes. You may have a corrupted boot sector or file 
allocation table (FAT) on drive C. Go to step 9.
No. Go to step 8.
6.
Rename your autoexec.bat and config.sys files, 
remove the operating system diskette from 
drive A, and reboot the computer. Does the oper-
ating system load now?
Yes. You have an error in your autoexec.bat or 
config.sys file. Use a text editor to examine the 
contents of these files and locate the error. For infor-
mation on the correct syntax for commands in these 
files, see the documentation that accompanied your 
operating system.
No. Go to step 7. 
7.
Insert your diagnostics diskette into drive A, and 
reboot the computer. Then run the Hard-Disk 
Drives (Non-SCSI) test group. Does your drive 
pass all the tests?
Yes. Go to step 8.
No. Go to step 9. 
8.
Replace your diagnostics diskette with the operat-
ing system diskette, and reboot the computer. 
Does the operating system load now?
Yes. The hard-disk drive may contain a corrupted 
operating system or it may have bad sectors. Re-
install the operating system as described in the 
documentation that came with it. If reinstalling the 
operating system does not correct the problem, go to 
step 9.
No. Go to step 9.
9.
Call Dell for technical assistance. 
See Chapter 5, “Getting Help,” for instructions.
Troubleshooting an External Keyboard
 
      
    
When you attach an external keyboard, the built-in key-
board remains fully functional except for the embedded 
numeric keypad. During POST, the computer checks 
whether an external keyboard is connected; if it is, the 
computer recognizes both the built-in keyboard and the 
external keyboard. If an attached external keyboard does 
not work when you boot the computer, make a copy of 
the Diagnostics Checklist found in Chapter 5 and fill it 
out as you complete the following procedure:
1.
Turn off the computer, and then remove the key-
board cable and check it for bent pins. 
2.
Reboot the computer.
3.
Make sure the cable from the external keyboard 
is firmly connected to the keyboard/mouse con-
nector on the back of the computer. (See 
“Checking Connections” found earlier in this 
chapter.)
4.
If you are using a keyboard that can be config-
ured with various switch settings, make sure the 
switch is set to PS/2, Enhanced XT/AT, or PC/AT.
The switch settings are usually on the bottom of the 
keyboard, sometimes behind a panel tab.
5.
Turn off the computer, wait one minute, and then 
turn it on again. During the boot routine, do the 
Num Lock, Caps Lock, and Scroll Lock indicators 
on the external keyboard blink momentarily? 
Yes. Go to step 6.
No. You may have a defective keyboard. Go to 
step 9.
6.
Does the computer recognize the external 
keyboard? 
Use the external keyboard to type some characters. 
Do they appear on the display?
Yes. The problem is resolved.
No. Go to step 7.
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