MacBook Pro won't startup

Hi, I know this topic has been discussed many times before, I've looked through the archives for some solutions, but in my case I just can't get anything to start-up and fear it's a logic board failure requiring re-install. If anyone could offer any advice I'd be grateful.
I've a MacBookPro running OSX.6
At first, the cursor froze on the desktop - no movement at all. I force restarted but the machine then froze  in the early stages of loading after the Apple logo appears. This was accompanied by a faint repeated knocking sound. After a few attempts trying to open in safe mode etc I was able to get the Mac to start-up again and immediate began backing up time machine onto a hard drive. After a short while however the screen froze once more, and this time no attempts at restarting in whatever mode worked - grey screen slowly gets to the Apple logo, the loading bar appears,  then after a few seconds, pouf! it just shuts down - power down, black screen.
I tried starting up from the installation CD so I could run Disc Utility, but same problem - CDrom is now stuck in the machine to add to my woes.
I checked the back up on the hard drive and discoved it was incomplete, so if I have to take it in to the Genius bar for a repair I'll have lost a lot of data.
Any suggestions?

Sorry,your HD is messed up, even may be going out... I hate 2.5" drives, they seem very short lived.
If it's under warranty I'd try Apple Repair, if not, there's a chancey way of trying it yourself... involves disconnecting the HD, booting off the CD, re-attaching the HD Cable, etc.
Oh, if you had a Diskwarrior CD, it might be able to save/repair your HD.

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    This step applies only to models that have a logic-board ("PRAM") battery: all Mac Pro's and some others (not current models.) Both desktop and portable Macs used to have such a battery. The logic-board battery, if there is one, is separate from the main battery of a portable. A dead logic-board battery can cause a startup failure. Typically the failure will be preceded by loss of the settings for the startup disk and system clock. See the user manual for replacement instructions. You may have to take the machine to a service provider to have the battery replaced.
    Step 13
    If you get this far, you're probably dealing with a hardware fault. Make a "Genius" appointment at an Apple Store, or go to another authorized service provider.

  • Macbook Pro won't boot or show partition

    I have my macbook pro partitioned with leopard and tiger (for protools) . I also have a copy of leopard on an external hard drive that I boot to occasionally. While on this external drive I had to do a manual shutdown after it froze and now my macbook pro won't show the internal drive partition with leopard on it. It will only boot to the internal partition with tiger on it. Even though I can see the leopard partition on the desktop and access it through tiger it is still not showing up in startup disk. I held the option key during startup and it gave me the choice to choose the leopard partition but after it started to go through booting it would then shut down.
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    I ran disk permissions and repair but its said everything is okay.

    I would try Diskwarrior 4.1 and see if that can repair the drive.
    btw how did you get Tiger on your Macbook Pro?
    My Tiger install DVD will not install on my Macbook pro even though it is a 3.1 version machine.
    I need to run Protools as well.

  • Macbook pro won't boot, stuck on white apple screen

    Noticed today, that my macbook pro won't boot . It gets to the white apple screen with the spinner under the apple logo. It stays like this for a long time without doing anything except spinning.
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    I have boot camp and windows on my mac and when the white screen appears, I can press Option to bring up which hard drive and the Windows partition will load without any problems.

    Exacty what happens when you try to boot up from the disc that came with your computer?  Are you holding down the c key?  Have you tried holding down the "option key?"  Are you able to run the Hardware Test - Intel-based Macs: Using Apple Hardware Test
    Shut down your computer and disconnect all peripherals (keyboard & mouse if pertinent) from your computer.  Now reboot.
    If the Mac starts up normally, shut it down again and then plug in one of the peripherals (keyboard or mouse first) and start up your computer again.  If it does so successfully repeat the process, adding one peripheral at a time until your Mac acts up.  At that point, disconnect the last peripheral you added, reboot your Mac and search the peripheral vendor's website for an updated driver. 
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    If your computer still does not start up properly, shut it down and restart it while holding down the Apple+Option-P-R keys; keep holding "all 4 keys" down until you hear the startup sound "twice."
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    Select your language.
    Once on the desktop, select Utility in the menu bar.
    Select Disk Utility.
    Select the disk or volume in the list of disks and volumes, and then click First Aid.
    Click Repair Disk.
    (If Disk Utility cannot repair, you will need a stronger utility (3rd party) - Diskwarrior or Techtool PRO)
    Restart your computer when done.
    Repair permissions after you reach the desktop-http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25751 and restart your computer.
    Remove any 3rd party ram.
    Reinstall Lion - This will install a "fresh" copy of Lion without archiving old system files but leaves the rest of your files in place.
    If your computer is still under warranty or you have Apple Care, take full advantage of it by letting tech support deal with your problems.  It's what you're paying them for.
    Out of warranty - take the computer to an Apple store or an AASP.  Whichever is more convenient for you.

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