Microsoft Support Policy on Hardware Not On Windows NT HCL
ID: Q142865
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Windows NT operating system version 3.1
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Microsoft Windows NT Advanced Server version 3.1
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Microsoft Windows NT Workstation versions 3.5, 3.51, 4.0
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Microsoft Windows NT Server versions 3.5, 3.51, 4.0
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Microsoft BackOffice Small Business Server versions 4.0a, 4.5
SUMMARY
Microsoft provides the Hardware Compatibility List (HCL) for Windows
NT-based products because Windows NT requires greater control of
the hardware compared to other operating systems such as MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows, for security, stability and efficiency reasons. This implies a deeper knowledge and usage of the computer hardware on the part of the operating system. Small incompatibilities and differences
from industry standards of that hardware can have an adverse effect on
the stability of the Windows NT operating system. For information about hardware that is supported in Windows NT, please see the following
article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q131303 Latest Windows NT Hardware Compatibility List (HCL)
NOTE: Small Business Server uses the Windows NT HCL.
MORE INFORMATION
A hardware device is unsupported if it is not listed on the HCL. In order for
a computer to be considered an HCL-compliant system, the computer must be listed
on the HCL. If a computer is not listed on the HCL, but is comprised of hardware
from the HCL (for example: motherboard from a reference system, SCSI controller,
video adapter, and network card) it is not considered an HCL computer. Any computer
that contains a device that is not on the HCL is not considered compliant. If a
particular computer is on the HCL, it can contain any combination of devices
listed on the HCL and still qualify for support even though the system as a whole was not tested.
Microsoft follows the guidelines and troubleshooting steps listed below on non-HCL equipment support issues:
Step 1: Hardware Configuration Inquiry
- The Microsoft Support Professional asks about the hardware configuration.
- If the hardware device is not on the Windows NT HCL, the support professional
informs the customer that 1 incident is charged from the customer's
service agreement (prior to troubleshooting).
- Upon agreement, the support professional proceeds to Step 2 below. Microsoft does
not guarantee a solution in cases with non-HCL devices.
- If there is no agreement, where the customer feels that an incident
should not be charged, the support professional proceeds to Step 3 below.
Step 2: Troubleshooting
A standard troubleshooting process is used to isolate the cause of the
problem. The following lists some of the resources and steps that the
Microsoft Support Professionals uses, which is also available to you:
- Microsoft Knowledge Base is available to customers through Microsoft
TechNet and Microsoft World Wide Web (WWW) site at:
http://support.microsoft.com/support/
- Determine if the problem occurs on supported hardware device.
- Check hardware and/or driver configuration by removing unsupported (or
suspected) components (for example: adapter cards and video cards).
Issues that relate to unsupported systems and motherboards cannot be
approached in this fashion.
During the course of troubleshooting, if the problem is isolated to a
non-HCL device, the support professional proceeds to Step 3 below and closes the call
(incident).
If there is no solution to the problem, the support professional explains the reason
and recommends constructive alternatives, such as one or all of the
following:
- The engineer offers the phone and Bulletin Board Service (BBS) number
for the motherboard, adapter card or other device manufacturer, if
available, so that the customer can ask for troubleshooting suggestions
and possible updated third-party drivers.
- The support professional may recommend that the customer request the hardware
vendor to attempt the installation of Windows NT on the system or
configure it in such a way that Windows NT becomes stable and
functional.
- The support professional informs the customer of BIOS or firmware updates. Some
information on the update is available in the Microsoft Knowledge Base.
Step 3: Alternative Resources
Enterprise Customer Unit (ECU) policy, in regards to a Windows NT failure
related to Non-HCL hardware, is for the support professional to fax the following
Knowledge Base article to the customer:
Windows NT 4.0 Setup Troubleshooting Guide
-or-
Windows NT 3.5x Setup Troubleshooting Guide
Alternatively, the support professional can provide information on the location of the
same file(s) and where they can be downloaded (Microsoft WWW server, FTP
server, and Microsoft Download Library). If the customer elects to bypass
Step 2 (does not wish to be charged for 1 incident), then the customer may
attempt to resolve the issue without charge using the troubleshooting
documents mentioned above. If the customer wishes to proceed with an
incident charge even after completing Step 2, the support professional can inform the
customer of the Microsoft Consulting Line at (800) 936-1565.
Server Down or Data Loss Issues
There is a possibility that an installation or upgrade of the Windows NT
operating system on unsupported hardware results in loss of some operating
system functionality or data. In cases where the previous operating system
has been Windows NT or another Microsoft operating system (such as MS-DOS,
Windows 3.1x, Windows 95, OS/2 1.3), the support professional determines if the issue
is a problem with the operating system or non-HCL hardware related. If the
problem is the operating system, the support professional will file a report and
evaluate the problem to provide a fix. The support professional will also attempt to
recover the system.
If the problem is related to hardware incompatibility, the customer will
need to restore the previous operating system and data from backup. If the
customer does not have a backup of the previous operating system, the
support professional will assist the customer in installing only the previous,
working operating system. This does not include other drive file
structures, data or security, or any other previous operating system
settings. The support professional will then refer the customer to the Microsoft
Consulting Line for any further file structure (not data) recovery, domain
configuration (user accounts, trust, shares, printers, replication)
recovery, as applicable.
In cases where the previous operating system is not a Microsoft operating
system (for example: Power PC system with AIX, OS/2 or Macintosh operating
system), Microsoft cannot assist customers in the recovery of their
system. Requisite knowledge and experience to perform recovery on non-
Microsoft operating systems do not exist in Microsoft Product Support
Services.
Additional query words:
smallbiz
Keywords : ntgeneral nthw
Version : winnt:3.5,3.51,4.0,4.0a,4.5
Platform : winnt
Issue type :
Last Reviewed: July 16, 1999