Cannot boot on Tiger Install DVD

Hi,


I have a PowerPC G5 2x2Ghz and I'm trying to reinstall Tiger on one of the two hard drives.

Here is my problem : no matter if I reboot from the Preferences or by pressing C or ALT, if I try to boot on the Install DVD, after the Apple shows up, a dark gray layer appears on my screen, saying that I need to restart my computer by holding down the power button for several seconds.

On the top of that, I have some complicated line :


Example :


panic(cpu 0 caller 0xFFFF0003) : 0x300 - Data access

Latest stack backtrace for cpu 0:


...


Kernel version :

Darwin Kernel Version 8.0.0 : Sat Mar 26 14:15:22 PST 2005; root:xnu-792.obj~1/RELEASE_PPC

panic : We are hanging here.



Any idea of what I can do about that? I really need to reinstall Tiger 😢

PowerMac, Mac OS X (10.4.1)

Posted on Jan 6, 2013 9:07 AM

Reply
6 replies

Jan 6, 2013 10:11 AM in response to Narciss94

You are having a kernel panic. Have you recently made any hardware changes like adding RAM?


Kernel panics are usually caused by a hardware problem – frequently RAM, a USB device or a Firewire device. What external devices do you have connected? When trying to troubleshoot problems, disconnect all external devices except your monitor, keyboard and mouse. Do you experience the same problems?


To eliminate RAM being the problem, Look at this link: Testing RAM @ http://guides.macrumors.com/Testing_RAM Then download & use Memtest & Ramber.


Do you have an Apple Hardware Test disc (the AHT is on the Install/Restore DVD that came with your Mac)? Running the Apple Hardware Test in Loop Mode is an excellent troubleshooting step for finding intermittent hardware problems. It is especially useful when troubleshooting intermittent kernel panics. If Loop Mode is supported by the version of the Apple Hardware Test you are using, you run the Extended Test in Loop Mode by pressing Control-L before starting the test. Looping On should appear in the right window. Then click the Extended Test button.The test will run continuously until a problem is found. If a problem is found, the test will cease to loop, indicating the problem it found. If the test fails, be sure to write down the exact message associated with the failure.In some cases, RAM problems did not show up until nearly 40 loops, so give it a good run.


May be a solution on one of these links.


http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106227What's a "kernel panic"? (Mac OS X)


http://www.macmaps.com/kernelpanic.htmlMac OS X Kernel Panic FAQ


http://www.index-site.com/kernelpanic.htmlMac OS X Kernel Panic FAQ


http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/kernelpanics.htmlResolving Kernel Panics


http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20060911080447777Avoiding and eliminating Kernel panics


http://macosg.com/group/viewtopic.php?t=80012-Step Program to Isolate Freezes and/or Kernel Panics


 Cheers, Tom 😉

Jan 6, 2013 12:26 PM in response to Narciss94

While I'm going through every link you gave me, here is the log printed by the Kernel panic. Maybe it can be helpful.



Tue May 8 14:00:03 2012

panic(cpu 1 caller 0x000E5AEC): vnode_rele_ext: vp 485ca50 usecount -ve : -1

Latest stack backtrace for cpu 1:

Backtrace:

0x000954F8 0x00095A10 0x00026898 0x000E5AEC 0x000EC6C0 0x000E7060 0x002702CC 0x0027CDA0

0x002ABDB8 0x000ABD30 0x75666549

Proceeding back via exception chain:

Exception state (sv=0x5BA93500)

PC=0x900C74E0; MSR=0x0000D030; DAR=0x902012E5; DSISR=0x40000000; LR=0x00002918; R1=0xBFFFFEA0; XCP=0x00000030 (0xC00 - System call)


Kernel version:

Darwin Kernel Version 8.11.0: Wed Oct 10 18:26:00 PDT 2007; root:xnu-792.24.17~1/RELEASE_PPC

*********

Jan 8, 2013 1:10 PM in response to Narciss94

Recently had a nearly identical problem with Panther. Was trying to do a complete reinstall and would get the grey screen with logo. After a while it would ask me to reboot by holding down the power button.


Turns out my CD/DVD drive was going bad. While it had been reading almost every disk just fine, it wasn't reading all of the install disk. I wasn't sure if it was the drive so I simply put my Windows PC next to my Mac and turned both systems off. I then unplugged the CD drive's ribbon cable from the motherboard of the PC and plugged it into the motherboard of the Mac (after unplugging the Mac's ribbon cable). I turned on the PC then the MAC and held down the "C" key and did a complete install from the CD drive in the PC.


This was a quick and dirty way that told me I had a bad drive while doing a complete install.

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Cannot boot on Tiger Install DVD

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