Welcome to PCForumz.com!
FAQFAQ      ProfileProfile    Private MessagesPrivate Messages   Log inLog in

computer won't power up - BIOS problem?

 
Goto page 1, 2
   Hardware Problem Solving Community! (Home) -> General Discussion RSS
Next:  Drive Letter Problem  
Author Message
yaweh32

External


Since: Jan 04, 2005
Posts: 1



(Msg. 1) Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2005 10:56 am
Post subject: computer won't power up - BIOS problem?
Archived from groups: alt>comp>hardware (more info?)

I'm running an old 450MHz CPU on an Asus P2B motherboard. Up until
today the computer was working fine. I just got back from my Christmas
holiday, during which I left the computer unplugged while I was away -
about 10 days. I also turned off the heating in my place as well - so
the apartment got cold while I was away (I'm in Norway).

When I plugged the computer back into the wall after the holiday (not
having touched anything), I get nothing from it. No glowing LED saying
it's plugged in, and no response when pressing the power/reset
buttons.

I tried a couple of suggestions from other Google groups posts:
1. Unplugged and replugged the video card.
2. Took out the BIOS battery, cleaned the contacts.

Still no luck.

What I then tried was to just take out the BIOS battery and plug the
computer in. Doing so, all the lights come on at the front (and on the
keyboard), but nothing shows up on the screen and the computer doesn't
start to boot.

Any ideas? Is the problem a result of the battery, or the cold?

Thanks ahead of time for your help.

 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
user960

External


Since: Jan 02, 2005
Posts: 13



(Msg. 2) Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2005 1:20 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"Yup" <yaweh32.DeleteThis@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:c082ca84.0501041056.5a1817e0@posting.google.com...
 > I'm running an old 450MHz CPU on an Asus P2B motherboard. Up until
 > today the computer was working fine. I just got back from my Christmas
 > holiday, during which I left the computer unplugged while I was away -
 > about 10 days. I also turned off the heating in my place as well - so
 > the apartment got cold while I was away (I'm in Norway).
 >
 > When I plugged the computer back into the wall after the holiday (not
 > having touched anything), I get nothing from it. No glowing LED saying
 > it's plugged in, and no response when pressing the power/reset
 > buttons.
 >
 > I tried a couple of suggestions from other Google groups posts:
 > 1. Unplugged and replugged the video card.
 > 2. Took out the BIOS battery, cleaned the contacts.
 >
 > Still no luck.
 >
 > What I then tried was to just take out the BIOS battery and plug the
 > computer in. Doing so, all the lights come on at the front (and on the
 > keyboard), but nothing shows up on the screen and the computer doesn't
 > start to boot.
 >
 > Any ideas? Is the problem a result of the battery, or the cold?
 >
 > Thanks ahead of time for your help.


First off you need to determine if you are getting any power out of the
power supply. When you plug in the computer and power up, do you hear
the drive whine up? Do the fans start spinning? Do you hear any beeps?
Does the Power LED glow on the system case? Do the
CapsLock-NumLock-ScrollLock LEDs flash on the keyboard? If you get none
of those, have you checked that you actually have any power at the
outlet by plugging an incandescent lamp into it? Is the computer
plugged into the outlet or into a power strip (and, if a power strip, is
it powered on and have you tested it circuit breaker and plugged a light
into it)? Is there a circuit breaker on the backside of the power
supply where you push in a button to reset it? Is there a fuse that you
can unscrew from the back of the power supply to check if it blew?

--
_________________________________________________________________
Post your replies to the newsgroup. Share with others.
E-mail: vanguard_newsATcomcast.com (append "#NEWS#" to Subject)
_________________________________________________________________<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->

 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
zotin_k

External


Since: Dec 03, 2004
Posts: 8



(Msg. 3) Posted: Tue Jan 04, 2005 3:35 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"Yup" <yaweh32.TakeThisOut@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:c082ca84.0501041056.5a1817e0@posting.google.com...
 > I'm running an old 450MHz CPU on an Asus P2B motherboard. Up until
 > today the computer was working fine. I just got back from my Christmas
 > holiday, during which I left the computer unplugged while I was away -
 > about 10 days. I also turned off the heating in my place as well - so
 > the apartment got cold while I was away (I'm in Norway).
 >
 > When I plugged the computer back into the wall after the holiday (not
 > having touched anything), I get nothing from it. No glowing LED saying
 > it's plugged in, and no response when pressing the power/reset
 > buttons.
 >
 > I tried a couple of suggestions from other Google groups posts:
 > 1. Unplugged and replugged the video card.
 > 2. Took out the BIOS battery, cleaned the contacts.
 >
 > Still no luck.
 >
 > What I then tried was to just take out the BIOS battery and plug the
 > computer in. Doing so, all the lights come on at the front (and on the
 > keyboard), but nothing shows up on the screen and the computer doesn't
 > start to boot.
 >
 > Any ideas? Is the problem a result of the battery, or the cold?
 >
 > Thanks ahead of time for your help.

Your BIOS battery is probably dead. As your computer must be
several years old, the battery probably had just about enough energy
left keep going so long as it was kept in a warm environment, aided
by the heat produced inside the computer itself when it was in
regular use. Being left alone in a Norwegian winter for more than
a week must have done it in for good.

Some computers can boot up with a good battery or with none,
but not with a weak one. Yours came closer to booting up with
no battery than with a weak one. Just pop in a new one and set
up your BIOS.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
user960

External


Since: Jan 02, 2005
Posts: 13



(Msg. 4) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 1:06 am
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"Zotin Khuma" <zotin_k RemoveThis @excludethis.rediffmail.com> wrote in message
news:340aqqF45ba8qU1@individual.net...
 >
 > "Yup" <yaweh32 RemoveThis @yahoo.com> wrote in message
 > news:c082ca84.0501041056.5a1817e0@posting.google.com...
  >> I'm running an old 450MHz CPU on an Asus P2B motherboard. Up until
  >> today the computer was working fine. I just got back from my
  >> Christmas
  >> holiday, during which I left the computer unplugged while I was
  >> away -
  >> about 10 days. I also turned off the heating in my place as well - so
  >> the apartment got cold while I was away (I'm in Norway).
  >>
  >> When I plugged the computer back into the wall after the holiday (not
  >> having touched anything), I get nothing from it. No glowing LED
  >> saying
  >> it's plugged in, and no response when pressing the power/reset
  >> buttons.
  >>
  >> I tried a couple of suggestions from other Google groups posts:
  >> 1. Unplugged and replugged the video card.
  >> 2. Took out the BIOS battery, cleaned the contacts.
  >>
  >> Still no luck.
  >>
  >> What I then tried was to just take out the BIOS battery and plug the
  >> computer in. Doing so, all the lights come on at the front (and on
  >> the
  >> keyboard), but nothing shows up on the screen and the computer
  >> doesn't
  >> start to boot.
  >>
  >> Any ideas? Is the problem a result of the battery, or the cold?
  >>
  >> Thanks ahead of time for your help.
 >
 > Your BIOS battery is probably dead. As your computer must be
 > several years old, the battery probably had just about enough energy
 > left keep going so long as it was kept in a warm environment, aided
 > by the heat produced inside the computer itself when it was in
 > regular use. Being left alone in a Norwegian winter for more than
 > a week must have done it in for good.
 >
 > Some computers can boot up with a good battery or with none,
 > but not with a weak one. Yours came closer to booting up with
 > no battery than with a weak one. Just pop in a new one and set
 > up your BIOS.
 >
 >


Guess I've seen a computer that wouldn't boot just because the battery
was dead. The battery is supposed to provide voltage to maintain the
values saved in the CMOS copy of the BIOS' EEPROM values when there is
no power. It isn't needed when there IS power. If you, for example,
have a computer that loses time or loses BIOS settings when you power
off, just don't power off until you get a replacement battery. If the
battery goes dead so the CMOS doesn't have sufficient voltage to retain
a *copy* of the BIOS settings, the original values get read from the
EEPROM and copied back into the CMOS table (since there is now power
after you turned on the power supply) and the machine boots.

The values were originally in the EEPROM. That's what you get when you
first power up your system. That's what got stored in the EEPROM so
there actually would be usable defaults for the mobo until whenever the
jobber happened to slap in a battery to build the machine. If you don't
want to keep the customized settings on a power up, you could leave out
the battery so the defaults get used on every power up.

The only way I could see a battery causing a problem with the CMOS table
(a copy of the table from EEPROM) would be if it wasn't dead but just
didn't have enough oompf to keep the voltage high enough to ensure the
CMOS table didn't get corrupted. Some settings might then lose their
values and you don't get what you expect. However, the BIOS from the
EEPROM gets loaded first to run its bootstrap program (there are no
programs in the CMOS copy) and it performs a CRC against the values in
the CMOS copy and compares that CRC value against the one stored in the
CMOS table. If they don't match, you get some error message telling you
the CMOS copy is corrupted and you'll have to reload the values from the
EEPROM.

If the battery were dead, the EEPROM values get copied into the CMOS and
the boot continues. If the battery is insufficient to guarantee the
values in the CMOS don't get corrupted, the CRC check detects the
corruption and alerts you (so you clear the CMOS or just remove the
battery to let the CMOS drain, and then boot without a battery until you
get around to getting one).

A dead battery won't prevent you from booting up. A failing battery
might force you to wipe a corrupted table in CMOS and reload the default
one from EEPROM, but that still doesn't prevent you from booting up.
--
_________________________________________________________________
Post your replies to the newsgroup. Share with others.
E-mail: vanguard_help AT yahoo.com (append "#NEWS#" to Subject)
_________________________________________________________________<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
kony

External


Since: Jan 03, 2004
Posts: 6148



(Msg. 5) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 5:35 am
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 01:06:06 -0600, "Vanguard"
<see_signature> wrote:


 >A dead battery won't prevent you from booting up. A failing battery
 >might force you to wipe a corrupted table in CMOS and reload the default
 >one from EEPROM, but that still doesn't prevent you from booting up.

Well that's true to a certain extent but not the whole
story. I've a box here right now that had an almost dead
battery earlier today. The board acted completely dead, not
even CPU fan spinning upon attempted power-on, only the
power LED glowing. I cleared CMOS to no avail w/AC power
off, and eventually pulled battery and installed a new one.
Only then did the board respond at all... was an Asus
A7V333.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
spajky2

External


Since: Nov 19, 2004
Posts: 112



(Msg. 6) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 12:35 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On 4 Jan 2005 10:56:23 -0800, yaweh32.DeleteThis@yahoo.com (Yup) wrote:

 >I'm running an old 450MHz CPU on an Asus P2B motherboard.
 >When I plugged the computer back into the wall after the holiday (not
 >having touched anything), I get nothing from it.

Try to re-seat the Cpu in the Slot
--
Regards & Happy New Year Everyone, SPAJKY ®
& visit my site @ <a style='text-decoration: underline;' href="http://www.spajky.vze.com" target="_blank">http://www.spajky.vze.com</a>
"Tualatin OC-ed / BX-Slot1 / inaudible setup!"
E-mail AntiSpam: remove ##<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
user960

External


Since: Jan 02, 2005
Posts: 13



(Msg. 7) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 1:17 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"kony" <spam.RemoveThis@spam.com> wrote in message
news:05dnt05ajptot9eb8g3efhu9hf3dik13ft@4ax.com...
 > On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 01:06:06 -0600, "Vanguard"
 > <see_signature> wrote:
 >
 >
  >>A dead battery won't prevent you from booting up. A failing battery
  >>might force you to wipe a corrupted table in CMOS and reload the
  >>default
  >>one from EEPROM, but that still doesn't prevent you from booting up.
 >
 > Well that's true to a certain extent but not the whole
 > story. I've a box here right now that had an almost dead
 > battery earlier today. The board acted completely dead, not
 > even CPU fan spinning upon attempted power-on, only the
 > power LED glowing. I cleared CMOS to no avail w/AC power
 > off, and eventually pulled battery and installed a new one.
 > Only then did the board respond at all... was an Asus
 > A7V333.


I stand corrected. If Kony says it happens then it does. Must be that
I've been lucky and either had a good battery (it boots), a bad battery
(it boots), or a weak battery (CMOS corrupted, checksum error, remove
battery, clear CMOS, it boots, and sometime later replace the battery).

I can see corrupted values in the CMOS table preventing boot up (because
the hard drive and other devices are unknown or incorrectly
parameterized) but a clear of the CMOS should force a reload of the
defaults from the EEPROM even if that reload occurs on every boot until
you finally get around to replacing the battery. Maybe if the defaults
in the EEPROM are not usable with the current hardware configuration
then it won't boot. Defaults that are unusable? Then how could you
ever used the mobo in the first place? If the setup is good and you
replace the battery quickly enough, the values are still in the CMOS and
you boot as before. If the setup is good and you replace the battery
too slowly or leave it out, the CMOS drains and you lose its settings
which can generate a checksum, low battery, or other error, and which
forces a reload of the defaults from the EEPROM (although some let you
save your customized settings in EEPROM and its that table that gets
reloaded). If the settings in the CMOS are corrupt with a good or bad
battery, you have to clear the CMOS to get the good values from EEPROM
(i.e., you have a corrupted table, so you clear it to force a reload of
defaults into it).

Know if the Asus mobo you mentioned will boot WITHOUT a battery (i.e.,
power down, remove battery, clear CMOS, and boot without the battery)?
If it doesn't boot without a battery, did you try clearing the CMOS
(with the battery still out) and try booting again? If that worked,
will the next boot work okay? A mobo that won't boot without a battery
seems like some very wrong circuit design or a defective component.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
kony

External


Since: Jan 03, 2004
Posts: 6148



(Msg. 8) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 8:35 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 13:17:11 -0600, "Vanguard"
<see_signature> wrote:


   >>>A dead battery won't prevent you from booting up. A failing battery
   >>>might force you to wipe a corrupted table in CMOS and reload the
   >>>default
   >>>one from EEPROM, but that still doesn't prevent you from booting up.
  >>
  >> Well that's true to a certain extent but not the whole
  >> story. I've a box here right now that had an almost dead
  >> battery earlier today. The board acted completely dead, not
  >> even CPU fan spinning upon attempted power-on, only the
  >> power LED glowing. I cleared CMOS to no avail w/AC power
  >> off, and eventually pulled battery and installed a new one.
  >> Only then did the board respond at all... was an Asus
  >> A7V333.
 >

<snip>

 >Know if the Asus mobo you mentioned will boot WITHOUT a battery (i.e.,
 >power down, remove battery, clear CMOS, and boot without the battery)?
 >If it doesn't boot without a battery, did you try clearing the CMOS
 >(with the battery still out) and try booting again? If that worked,
 >will the next boot work okay? A mobo that won't boot without a battery
 >seems like some very wrong circuit design or a defective component.

Well I still have the old battery, still have the board out
too, will try that.

The history of the board was that it was working fine when
shipped to a customer, it sat unpowered (& disconnected from
AC) for about 2 weeeks AFAIK. Customer then proceeded to
try board, couldn't get it working, and since I didn't feel
comfortable telling this customer to do any troubleshooting
on it, I simply sent a replacement board. Customer returned
the A7V333, which I might've tried upon receipt but I can't
recall it now. Months(?) later I was disassembling another
testbed and decided it was convenient to swap in the A7V333
and found it odd that there was no sign of life at all...
except that power LED, but I meant the onboard 5VSB LED, not
the case power LED.

Board consistently posts and boots DOS so I'll swap the
batteries around and report back.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
kony

External


Since: Jan 03, 2004
Posts: 6148



(Msg. 9) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 10:35 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On Thu, 06 Jan 2005 01:00:25 GMT, kony <spam.TakeThisOut@spam.com>
wrote:


 >Board consistently posts and boots DOS so I'll swap the
 >batteries around and report back.

I've checked that A7V333...

AC power disconnected, battery pulled - Acts dead, no post
(next step, seconds later) AC disconnected, CMOS cleared -
Acts dead, no post

Checked voltage on old battery, only a few dozem mV.
Reinstalled dead battery just for heck of it - no change,
still dead

Pulled batery, cleared CMOS again w/ac-off, still nothing
w/o battery

Reinstall good battery - 1st time system posts since point
when battery was removed<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
user960

External


Since: Jan 02, 2005
Posts: 13



(Msg. 10) Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2005 10:47 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"kony" <spam.TakeThisOut@spam.com> wrote in message
news:eq9pt0ptdf01ntjpq7763436kaljsnq2eu@4ax.com...
 > On Thu, 06 Jan 2005 01:00:25 GMT, kony <spam.TakeThisOut@spam.com>
 > wrote:
 >
 >
  >>Board consistently posts and boots DOS so I'll swap the
  >>batteries around and report back.
 >
 > I've checked that A7V333...
 >
 > AC power disconnected, battery pulled - Acts dead, no post
 > (next step, seconds later) AC disconnected, CMOS cleared -
 > Acts dead, no post
 >
 > Checked voltage on old battery, only a few dozem mV.
 > Reinstalled dead battery just for heck of it - no change,
 > still dead
 >
 > Pulled batery, cleared CMOS again w/ac-off, still nothing
 > w/o battery
 >
 > Reinstall good battery - 1st time system posts since point
 > when battery was removed
 >


No battery, CMOS cleared, and it won't boot (presumably that means you
can't even get as far as to the BIOS setup screens)? Christ. Not good,
not good at all.

Hmm, does this have those fat boxes with the RTC and memory circuit
inside, like the Dallas box? The picture (even when exploded) at
<a style='text-decoration: underline;' href="http://usa.asus.com/prog/spec.asp?m=A7V333&langs=09#" target="_blank">http://usa.asus.com/prog/spec.asp?m=A7V333&langs=09#</a> is too tiny for me
to see what's on that mobo. That had a memory circuit, crystal, and
tiny battery inside. Maybe the battery inside that NVRAM box is dead (I
never liked that they called it NVRAM because it had a battery inside so
the RAM really wasn't non-volatile just because the battery was hidden).
I recall you could pop off the cover to look inside.

Of the other posts found where A7V333 owners couldn't boot without the
battery, some mentioned that they were replacing their coin cell battery
every 2 to 4 months. I know a circuit to build that can use a cheap
cordless telephone 3.6V Nicad battery, 1n4001 diode, and 10-ohm, 1/4W
resistor that can be used which has the nicad recharging and takes the
place of the battery so you get around the problem of repeatedly having
to replace the battery at short intervals. But that the problem even
exists points to a defective component that is drawing too much current
from the battery (which has no recharge circuit so they just keep
draining). Of course, you would actually have to be the user of that
mobo to know after a long time if that mobo was eating up batteries
every few months instead of lasting 3 to 7 years.

Time to throw some more batteries into the toolkit, I guess.

--
_________________________________________________________________
Post your replies to the newsgroup. Share with others.
E-mail: vanguard_help AT yahoo.com (append "#NEWS#" to Subject)
_________________________________________________________________<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
kony

External


Since: Jan 03, 2004
Posts: 6148



(Msg. 11) Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2005 5:23 am
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 22:47:21 -0600, "Vanguard"
<see_signature> wrote:


  >> I've checked that A7V333...
  >>
  >> AC power disconnected, battery pulled - Acts dead, no post
  >> (next step, seconds later) AC disconnected, CMOS cleared -
  >> Acts dead, no post
  >>
  >> Checked voltage on old battery, only a few dozem mV.
  >> Reinstalled dead battery just for heck of it - no change,
  >> still dead
  >>
  >> Pulled batery, cleared CMOS again w/ac-off, still nothing
  >> w/o battery
  >>
  >> Reinstall good battery - 1st time system posts since point
  >> when battery was removed
  >>
 >
 >
 >No battery, CMOS cleared, and it won't boot (presumably that means you
 >can't even get as far as to the BIOS setup screens)? Christ. Not good,
 >not good at all.

Right, no POST, no bios setup, the fans don't spin... it
doesn't turn the power supply on.

I wouldn't necessarily consider it a bad thing though except
for some kind of emergency situation, (or troubleshooting)
as this has never been a problem/issue except for me (and
others) who had to do a board replacement because end-user
didn't check the battery.

 >
 >Hmm, does this have those fat boxes with the RTC and memory circuit
 >inside, like the Dallas box? The picture (even when exploded) at
 >http://usa.asus.com/prog/spec.asp?m=A7V333&langs=09# is too tiny for me
 >to see what's on that mobo. That had a memory circuit, crystal, and
 >tiny battery inside. Maybe the battery inside that NVRAM box is dead (I
 >never liked that they called it NVRAM because it had a battery inside so
 >the RAM really wasn't non-volatile just because the battery was hidden).
 >I recall you could pop off the cover to look inside.

No, but here's a pic:

<a style='text-decoration: underline;' href="http://arch.pconline.com.cn/pchardware/tpylab/main/10203/pic/rev-a7v333-boardLG.jpg" target="_blank">http://arch.pconline.com.cn/pchardware/tpylab/main/10203/pic/rev-a7v33...oardLG.</a>


 >
 >Of the other posts found where A7V333 owners couldn't boot without the
 >battery, some mentioned that they were replacing their coin cell battery
 >every 2 to 4 months.

Well I don't know what their issue was, but this board had
it's original battery still, had been used intermittently
for (maybe?) a couple years here without any problem, being
disconnected from AC quite often as it wasn't in a regularly
used system but for a few of the first months of it's life.
No way to know at this point whether the battery life was
particularly bad but it doesn't seem that way to me.

It was a nice board for it's time, a little on the picky
side PCI-wise due to it being Via chipset, just got eclipsed
by nForce2 and higher levels of integration instead of
separate RAID, USB2, and lower-end (CMI) sound chip.

 > I know a circuit to build that can use a cheap
 >cordless telephone 3.6V Nicad battery, 1n4001 diode, and 10-ohm, 1/4W
 >resistor that can be used which has the nicad recharging and takes the
 >place of the battery so you get around the problem of repeatedly having
 >to replace the battery at short intervals. But that the problem even
 >exists points to a defective component that is drawing too much current
 >from the battery (which has no recharge circuit so they just keep
 >draining). Of course, you would actually have to be the user of that
 >mobo to know after a long time if that mobo was eating up batteries
 >every few months instead of lasting 3 to 7 years.
 >
 >Time to throw some more batteries into the toolkit, I guess.

Hard to say, I've come across users who kept buying old
batteries from same source so they were practially dead
already... the "new" battery I tried wasn't particularly
"new" though, just a mystery spare I must've pulled out of
some old board somewhere when throwing things away. I'll
have to remember to replace it with a fresh one if I
redeploy this board.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
yaweh321

External


Since: Jan 06, 2005
Posts: 1



(Msg. 12) Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2005 8:40 am
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Thanks for all the replies, folks. I appreciate it.

I'm now writing this on the previously dead computer, so it's all ok
now. However, fixing it wasn't as straightforward as just putting in
the new battery.

When I slotted the new battery in, the computer was still dead. I
started wondering what the hell was going on - took out the battery,
cleared the CMOS, put the battery back in, still nothing.

Took the battery out, still nothing.

Then, out of simple trial and error reasoning, I unplugged the monitor,
keyboard and mouse off the back, and tried it again (with the battery
out). Surprise, it works. Who the hell knows why. While it's booting, I
plug the mouse, keyboard, monitor, and battery back in (while the
computer was running - I know, bad thing to do), and set up the BIOS
again. All works fine now.
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
user960

External


Since: Jan 02, 2005
Posts: 13



(Msg. 13) Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2005 12:15 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

<yaweh32.DeleteThis@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1105029642.044655.242360@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
 > Thanks for all the replies, folks. I appreciate it.
 >
 > I'm now writing this on the previously dead computer, so it's all ok
 > now. However, fixing it wasn't as straightforward as just putting in
 > the new battery.
 >
 > When I slotted the new battery in, the computer was still dead. I
 > started wondering what the hell was going on - took out the battery,
 > cleared the CMOS, put the battery back in, still nothing.
 >
 > Took the battery out, still nothing.
 >
 > Then, out of simple trial and error reasoning, I unplugged the
 > monitor,
 > keyboard and mouse off the back, and tried it again (with the battery
 > out). Surprise, it works. Who the hell knows why. While it's booting,
 > I
 > plug the mouse, keyboard, monitor, and battery back in (while the
 > computer was running - I know, bad thing to do), and set up the BIOS
 > again. All works fine now.
 >


USB mouse and USB keyboard, maybe?

--
_________________________________________________________________
Post your replies to the newsgroup. Share with others.
E-mail: vanguard_help AT yahoo.com (append "#NEWS#" to Subject)
_________________________________________________________________<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
zotin_k

External


Since: Dec 03, 2004
Posts: 8



(Msg. 14) Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2005 12:45 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"kony" <spam RemoveThis @spam.com> wrote in message
news:elhpt0djs3l0ob7qsv2nbrqktpte89pgtt@4ax.com...
 > On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 22:47:21 -0600, "Vanguard"
 > <see_signature> wrote:
 >
 >
   > >> I've checked that A7V333...
   > >>
   > >> AC power disconnected, battery pulled - Acts dead, no post
   > >> (next step, seconds later) AC disconnected, CMOS cleared -
   > >> Acts dead, no post
   > >>
   > >> Checked voltage on old battery, only a few dozem mV.
   > >> Reinstalled dead battery just for heck of it - no change,
   > >> still dead
   > >>
   > >> Pulled batery, cleared CMOS again w/ac-off, still nothing
   > >> w/o battery
   > >>
   > >> Reinstall good battery - 1st time system posts since point
   > >> when battery was removed
   > >>
  > >
  > >
  > >No battery, CMOS cleared, and it won't boot (presumably that means you
  > >can't even get as far as to the BIOS setup screens)? Christ. Not good,
  > >not good at all.
 >
 > Right, no POST, no bios setup, the fans don't spin... it
 > doesn't turn the power supply on.
 >
 > I wouldn't necessarily consider it a bad thing though except
 > for some kind of emergency situation, (or troubleshooting)
 > as this has never been a problem/issue except for me (and
 > others) who had to do a board replacement because end-user
 > didn't check the battery.
 >
The fact is that different mobos behave in different ways with a weak
or no battery. While many (maybe most) will boot up with no battery
installed, some others simply refuse to do so. I've come across such
types though I didn't make a note of which models those were.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
zotin_k

External


Since: Dec 03, 2004
Posts: 8



(Msg. 15) Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2005 12:56 pm
Post subject: Re: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

"kony" <spam RemoveThis @spam.com> wrote in message
news:elhpt0djs3l0ob7qsv2nbrqktpte89pgtt@4ax.com...
 > On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 22:47:21 -0600, "Vanguard"
 > <see_signature> wrote:
 >
 >
   > >> I've checked that A7V333...
   > >>
   > >> AC power disconnected, battery pulled - Acts dead, no post
   > >> (next step, seconds later) AC disconnected, CMOS cleared -
   > >> Acts dead, no post
   > >>
   > >> Checked voltage on old battery, only a few dozem mV.
   > >> Reinstalled dead battery just for heck of it - no change,
   > >> still dead
   > >>
   > >> Pulled batery, cleared CMOS again w/ac-off, still nothing
   > >> w/o battery
   > >>
   > >> Reinstall good battery - 1st time system posts since point
   > >> when battery was removed
   > >>
  > >
  > >
  > >No battery, CMOS cleared, and it won't boot (presumably that means you
  > >can't even get as far as to the BIOS setup screens)? Christ. Not good,
  > >not good at all.
 >
 > Right, no POST, no bios setup, the fans don't spin... it
 > doesn't turn the power supply on.
 >
 > I wouldn't necessarily consider it a bad thing though except
 > for some kind of emergency situation, (or troubleshooting)
 > as this has never been a problem/issue except for me (and
 > others) who had to do a board replacement because end-user
 > didn't check the battery.
 >
The fact is that different mobos behave in different ways with a
weak or no battery. Some will start acting up when the battery
voltage drops below 2V while others work down to about 1V.
Many (maybe most) boot up with no battery installed but some
others simply refuse to do so. I've come across such types
before though I didn't make a note of which ones.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
 >> Stay informed about: computer won't power up - BIOS problem? 
Back to top
Login to vote
Display posts from previous:   
Related Topics:
low-power computer - Hi, I'm looking for a very low-power computer to be used as a simple server. Simply my focus is on: * low-power (< 15W typical usage preferably) * low-cost * performance It must actually run Windows 2000/2003. It will be used as a router with some e...

Computer won't restart after power outage - This happened before, but after jiggling the cord it finally came on. We thought it was just a loose cord from reaching across it to turn the power strip off when the lights went out. Then last night we had another power outage and now no matter what we...

Help! Computer turns off 2 seconds after power on - I just got a new km4m combo motherboard, Amd Athlon 2000 cpu, 256 DDR 333 memory and a 160gig hard drive. I put it all together (not the first time) and crank it up. It starts, the fans are running, 2 seconds and it turns itself off. Tried different cpu,...

Problem with rebooting computer - Hello everyone! I have a such a problem. I have got hardwares 80GB and 40 GB and when they are both connected or one of them is connected to computer, while computer working suddenly computer is rebooting. It appears only when I do some operations on..

basic power problem - How do you get a motherboard and an atx power supply to come to life? I hope this is not too obvious a question. But basically I've never built a pc before so I don't have any experience. I've fitted extra memory, drives and cards but I've never built..
   Hardware Problem Solving Community! (Home) -> General Discussion All times are: Pacific Time (US & Canada) (change)
Goto page 1, 2
Page 1 of 2

 
You can post new topics in this forum
You can reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



[ Contact us | Terms of Service/Privacy Policy ]