RDellinger said:
I have 2 matched sticks of ram and 2 36gig raptor hard drives. I've
already swapped the power supply with no luck. Is the BIOS revision
also stenciled in the motherboard near the motherboard model #, ie.
SK8N?If it is, then it shows rev. 1003. Thanks for your reply.
That is the revision of the motherboard printed circuit board.
The revision number is revved any time the copper tracks on
the motherboard are changed. Normally, it would read something
like 1.03 and be printed in silk screened white letters, just
like the motherboard name.
What you are looking for, is the paper label on the socketed
flash EEPROM chip. The flash chip has leads on four sides (PLCC),
and the chip sits in a socket. Now, the fun begins when you try to
correlate what is on the label, with what is available on
the download site. I cannot guarantee that I can figure out
what you've got, but it is all you have to go on. As the
cpusupport web page says FX-51 won't boot without BIOS 1003,
it is something to check. Apparently, if you were to plug
an Opteron in there, it is supposed to boot up as slick
as can be. (Sometimes the number on the label, corresponds to
a string in one of the BIOS files, near the end of the file.
I use a hex editor, and download all the BIOS files, and try
and match them up that way.)
I don't understand why Asus didn't put the Voice POST chip
on this board. I bet the SK8N board wasn't cheap to buy, and
there is room on the left hand side of the board for more
circuitry. The Voice POST chips aren't that expensive in
volume, and Asus uses a lot of them.
Another diagnostic device that is sometimes useful, is
a "port card". This is a device with two LED displays on it,
and the BIOS code makes blind writes to I/O port 80 while
the POST code is running. The numbers shown on the display
represent the routine currently executing. If the BIOS
gets stuck, the number on the display then represents what
routine it got stuck in. These cards are sometimes sold on
Ebay, for in the neighbourhood of $29.95 or so. The pictures
I've seen, show a card that can plug in a PCI slot, or an ISA
slot, by rotating the card 90 degrees. Since your motherboard
is beeping, that means at least some BIOS code is running.
At least one motherboard manufacturer integrates this two
digit display, right into the motherboard. The display is a
lot more useful than Voice POST.
HTH,
Paul