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8RDA+ won't POST

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gbro...@gmail.com

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Jul 1, 2008, 11:44:29 PM7/1/08
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I've got an 8RDA+ system that was running fine early today. (It is not
overclocked, but I'm thinking overclockers may have some insights too,
hence the cross post.)

It was left on while people left the room. When they came back a few
hours later it was dead. Now it won't even POST.

History: ~3 weeks ago it started giving a message at boot time saying
the CPU had changed. (It hadn't)
I swapped in a new CMOS Battery and after a lot of other Windows
related issues had the machine running fine again, except that it
would complain that the 80 conductor 2nd-ary IDE Cable was not
connected. (it was)
After a while longer, it failed to boot because it didn't detect the
floppy (which was still connected). I went into the BIOS and told it
to ignore that error. It booted fine and continued working.

Now it's dead. A few times I was able to get the power and fans to
come on but the system would not even get to the BIOS screen. I
checked the PS with a volt meter and got proper voltages on the
peripheral connectors (+5v, +12v) The LED error codes would stop at a
different value each time it froze: 00, FF, C1, CF, 0d. It was very
random. I would sometime get long beeps. Then I started getting hi-
lo-hi-lo alternating beeps.

I disconnected ALL the IDE cables and their power supplies and even
the MoBo from the PS. Then I reconnected them all and now I don't
even get power or fans. I can see the NIC lights (yellow and green)
come on, and I can see the LED briefly flash FF (<0.5sec).

I'm starting to think the BIOS Chip went south. Any other
suggestions?

This machine has been a trooper and I'd hate to see it go.

I'd appreciate any pointers.

Thanks.

Glen

David Lee

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Jul 2, 2008, 12:27:02 AM7/2/08
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gbro...@gmail.com wrote in news:271c3b68-c5f4-4d6c-8600-22faeff09cf5
@i76g2000hsf.googlegroups.com:

You didn't mention the capacitors. Its a common problem for Epox and
other brands too. They SHOULD'NT be swollen or leaky.

Dave


Paul

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Jul 2, 2008, 12:32:06 AM7/2/08
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The hi-lo-hi-lo police siren, suggests you should have a look at
the capacitors near the CPU socket.

http://www.nforcershq.com/forum/1-vt65416.html?start=0

There is a closeup here, of some bad capacitors. The reason the
ones around the CPU tend to go, is because they are under the
most stress (high ripple current). Also, look on the PCB, as there
could be a brown stain, where a liquid leaked and dried up.

http://www.badcaps.net/images/caps/kt7/image004.png

If you don't stop using a motherboard, when the capacitors start
to go, there can be collateral damage. The MOSFETs or the
toroidal coils near the caps, can fail as a result of the
overload caused by failed caps.

People have managed to fix things like this, but at some
point, the amount spent on parts or tools, outweighs
any possible saving. For example, one guy used to charge
$50 to re-cap a board, but for that price, you might find
a whole replacement board on Ebay. Some enjoy stuff like
this, and for them the money is not an issue.

Paul

gbro...@gmail.com

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Jul 2, 2008, 8:01:40 AM7/2/08
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On Jul 2, 12:32 am, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote:
>     Paul- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

Thanks for the suggestions. I checked all the electrolytics on the
board and they all look pristine. No evidence of swelling or
leakage.

Other ideas?

Glen

Paul

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Jul 2, 2008, 2:42:19 PM7/2/08
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The thing is, your symptoms suggested I/O related problems,
and the problems don't necessarily all share the same
voltage. There are regulators on the motherboard, some
to power the CPU, some for the chipset, one for AGP slot,
and so on, and something like that could be having a problem.
Not all the important voltages on the board, show up in the
hardware monitor BIOS screen.

About all you can do, is start unplugging stuff, and see if
you can get any error beeps out of it. That would tell you
BIOS code is running, the CPU is working, and the chipset
has power. For example, with no video card or RAM present,
you should get a beep code. And the beep code should continue
to repeat.

If the checksum on the main BIOS code was bad, then the
BIOS may attempt to access the floppy, looking for a way
to repair the BIOS. The code to do that, is in the boot
block in the BIOS.

And since you have a POST code display, that is an even easier
way to check for progress. If the display stays at FF, then
there isn't any processing going on.

If the display can only show the FF code for a short period,
I'd be asking what was powering the display. From experience,
you probably know whether that display has a blanking function,
and is capable of turning off the LEDs on the display, under
normal circumstances. Or whether the LEDs on the display,
would normally be running all the time.

Paul

gbro...@gmail.com

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Jul 2, 2008, 7:52:26 PM7/2/08
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It may not come as a surprise, but on closer inspection, one of the
caps is bulging. Looks just like the pictures scattered about the
net. The question now is fix or replace. It's a 4 year-old board so
it's a tough call. I'll mull it over.

Thanks for the help!

Glen

Kuskokwim

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Jul 3, 2008, 10:21:49 AM7/3/08
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You probably already did it, but did you check the power supply voltage
that goes to the PW12 connector on the MB?

I had boot problems with my 8RDA+ and replaced in with a new one thinking
it was the capacitors, but the new one acted the same.

It turned out that the power supply, which seemed to working properly,
actually was not supplying the proper voltage to the PW12 connector.

Lee M.

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Jul 4, 2008, 5:39:03 PM7/4/08
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<gbro...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:229b1689-6773-4821...@a1g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...

On Jul 2, 2:42 pm, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote:
> gbrook...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Jul 2, 12:32 am, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote:
> >> gbrook...@gmail.com wrote:
> >>> I've got an 8RDA+ system that was running fine early today. (It is not
> >>> overclocked, but I'm thinking overclockers may have some insights too,
> >>> hence the cross post.)
> >>> It was left on while people left the room. When they came back a few
> >>> hours later it was dead. Now it won't even POST.
> >>> History: ~3 weeks ago it started giving a message at boot time saying
> >>> the CPU had changed. (It hadn't)
> >>> I swapped in a new CMOS Battery and after a lot of other Windows
> >>> related issues had the machine running fine again, except that it
> >>> would complain that the 80 conductor 2nd-ary IDE Cable was not
> >>> connected. (it was)
> >> The hi-lo-hi-lo police siren, suggests you should have a look at
> >> the capacitors near the CPU socket.
>

It may not come as a surprise, but on closer inspection, one of the


caps is bulging. Looks just like the pictures scattered about the
net. The question now is fix or replace. It's a 4 year-old board so
it's a tough call. I'll mull it over.

Thanks for the help!

Glen
====================
I had an 8RDA+ that ran for well over a year with multiple bulging caps. A
month or two before it finally gave up the ghost, it would sometimes require
2 or 3 attempts to boot and would give that siren sound and the monitor
would indicate no video signal. One day it just refused to boot despite
multiple attempts, reseating cards, RAM, etc. There were at least 10
bulging caps so I didn't bother to try an replace them.

If this is not your primary computer or if you can wait a while to replace
the mobo, there are Epox 8RDA-series mobos on Ebay all the time. I got an
8RDA3+ Pro to replace mine for $41 with shipping. It has no bulging caps
and runs perfectly. I also have an Ebay purchased 8RDA3+ in my primary
computer that has run 12 hrs/day for over a year without problems. They are
out there if you can be patient.


goldy

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Jul 9, 2008, 5:41:09 PM7/9/08
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gbro...@gmail.com

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Jul 10, 2008, 10:12:20 AM7/10/08
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Yes, I found this site. It would appear I can order a complete
replacement board, but when I tried to do that the site doesn't allow
the completion of the orders. It throws some MSQL error. I e-mailed
and asked if the items were in stock and I got a reply saying they
were. When I e-mailed again about the broken site I got no reply.
Very frustrating.

In the mean time, I removed a bunch of capacitors from my existing
board thinking I would just fix it. In the process it appears I
severed a trace on the board during removal of one of the caps.
Assuming I can fix the trace the cost of new caps will be about the
same as a new board ... if the epoxstore site would work.

Glen

gdp

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Jul 10, 2008, 7:45:04 PM7/10/08
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gbro...@gmail.com wrote:

> Yes, I found this site. It would appear I can order a complete
> replacement board, but when I tried to do that the site doesn't allow
> the completion of the orders. It throws some MSQL error. I e-mailed
> and asked if the items were in stock and I got a reply saying they
> were. When I e-mailed again about the broken site I got no reply.
> Very frustrating.
>
> In the mean time, I removed a bunch of capacitors from my existing
> board thinking I would just fix it. In the process it appears I
> severed a trace on the board during removal of one of the caps.
> Assuming I can fix the trace the cost of new caps will be about the
> same as a new board ... if the epoxstore site would work.
>
> Glen


It was a year and a half ago, there were messages in this group about
credit card information submitted to epoxstore being stolen and used?
Perhaps they are using paypal now, so less chance of a problem? Caution
is urged.

George

gbro...@gmail.com

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Jul 25, 2008, 9:26:01 PM7/25/08
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On Jul 10, 7:45 pm, gdp <gdp...@cox.invalid> wrote:

The epox store came back on-line and I was able to order a refurbished
8RDA+. I installed it tonight but it still won't boot. The boot
codes it stops at seem random again. 9dh and 6fh come to mind. So at
this point it shouldn't be the MB. I checked the PS before I pulled
the MB, so I believe it is ok. I could try a different memory stick.
Any other suggestions? I guess perhaps the CPU could have died, but I
have no way to test for that.

Glen

Paul

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Jul 26, 2008, 1:20:32 AM7/26/08
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Can you try booting from something else ? Like a Linux LiveCD ?
Knoppix (knopper.net) or Ubuntu (ubuntu.com) are examples.
I like Knoppix, due to the text displayed on the screen during
the CDROM boot process. No hard drive is needed to operate with
a Linux LiveCD. Either Linux is a 700MB download, and you need
a burning tool that can handle ISO9660 file format.

A second possible test, is to get a diagnostic for the hard drive,
from the hard drive manufacturer's web site. That should be a bootable
setup, allowing you to test that something other than your existing
Windows install can boot. It'll also give an opportunity to check
the hard drive and the I/O path to the hard drive.

Even memtest86+ from memtest.org, gives a bootable media, although
the boot sequence doesn't take very long.

Paul

gbro...@gmail.com

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Jul 26, 2008, 9:56:21 AM7/26/08
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On Jul 26, 1:20 am, Paul <nos...@needed.com> wrote:

I have a Knoppix LiveCD. The problem in this case however is that the
machine won't even get to the boot phase. It's hanging in the POST
before the bios screen is ever even displayed. I've now swapped in a
new motherboard. I've tested a new RAM stick. I've checked the PS
voltages at the ATX connector with the machine powered on (all
voltages seem normal). I'm left to conclude that it's either a bad
video card that's stalling the boot at random places, or a dead CPU.
I may find an alternate video card to try. It's not likely that I'll
find another CPU to try. If it's the CPU it's time for a new system I
guess.

Glen

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