Hi and welcome to the forum
I'll be trying to give you a helping hand today. The first thing we need from you is some hardware information about your computer. Please post Make/Model of computer. Is it a desktop PC or a laptop/tablet? If it's a desktop PC, is it an
OEM (Dell, HP, Acer, Gateway, Toshiba, etc.) or a self-built rig or custom-built rig? If so, we need all the hardware specs including Make/Model of Motherboard, GPU card, and PSU including wattage. An easy way to get us this information if you don't have it handy is to go to piriform.com and download the FREE
SPECCY diagnostic. Post the resulting output text file from
SPECCY back here to this thread so we can analyze your hardware.
Next, if you have an XP computer, it's seriously out of date and you should consider retiring it as the hardware is ancient; 10-15 years old now.
That being said, you have some other misconceptions about doing upgrades and windows configurations.
#1: you never ever run any version of Windows from any other logical drive other than the C: drive. Doing so causing major problems between the Windows OS kernel, BIOS of your Motherboard and the hard drives in your system.
#2: never, ever run an upgrade on a windows computer with a bunch of hard drives all connected to the Motherboard; whether they are connected via SATA, eSATA, USB, firewire, or whatever.
You should only upgrade your Windows on
ONE HARD DRIVE, which should be physical hard drive 0; also known as the C: bootdrive. All other secondary drives, internal and external should be disconnected from the XP machine until
AFTER the Win7 or whichever version of Windows you are attempting to upgrade to completes successfully! This also means that no usb, or serial/parallel printers, webcams, scanners, trackballs, etc. should be plugged in and connected to that computer during your Windows OS upgrade either!
Those 2 items alone can and probably have caused major problems with that XP computer working normally.
You have several other items to consider; the list is really lengthy. The one that really sticks out for us here at the forum is that people often try to run really old computer hardware such as you have well beyond it's designed life.
This can be done by experts, and we do this sort of thing all the time; though less and less as many of us professional techs who do this for a living have made the decision to drop all repairs and support for clients with XP hardware; especially since Microsoft dropped support for XP back on
Apr. 14th 2014: 2 years ago!
This being said you will need to test your hardware; specifically the RAM memory sticks and the Hard Drive.
Hard Drives are only designed to last 3 years in desktop PCs and 2 years in laptops. If you've never replaced that C: drive hard drive since that computer was purchased and you are the original and only owner--it's extremely unlikely to be working, and if tested and it fails, it should be replaced!
I'll give you a link to get you to the hardware testing, and a host of other solutions we commonly find work on older computers such as yours when trying to run a modern version of Windows, such as Win7 or newer. Here's that link:
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Post back your hardware specs, and we'll advise you further.
Best of luck,
<<<BIGBEARJEDI>>>