B
Brent L. Harritt
After running for more than 3 years without a problem, my PC now fails to
boot with a long, short, short POST beep codes (which indicates a video card
or motherboard problem). After one or more (some times many more) power
offs and on, the system will start in the "safe" mode of the BIOS setup. If
I set the FSB from 1000 back to 950, I can now start and run the PC, until
the next time I power off the system. Then the cycle repeats. I am running
the following hardware:
ASUS A7V133 Motherboard with 256M 133 ram
Athlon 1 GHz CPU
ATI All-In-Wonder Pro (Rage Fury) Video Card
I have run the ASUS Probe and ATI Diagnostic software and they report no
problems. I also replaced the BIOS on-board battery. Also, I noted shortly
before the boot issues, that I had some very faint diagonal lines on the
video display, so this may be related. The problem is probably in the
motherboard, video card, or power supply, but I don't want to run out and
buy one piece, only to find it does not fix the problem, then buy another
new piece, only to find it also fails to fix the problem. Can anyone offer
some suggestions to try and isolate the problem component. If not, I will
probably use this as an excuse to upgrade the motherboard, CPU, RAM, video
card and case/powersupply.
TIA,
Brent
boot with a long, short, short POST beep codes (which indicates a video card
or motherboard problem). After one or more (some times many more) power
offs and on, the system will start in the "safe" mode of the BIOS setup. If
I set the FSB from 1000 back to 950, I can now start and run the PC, until
the next time I power off the system. Then the cycle repeats. I am running
the following hardware:
ASUS A7V133 Motherboard with 256M 133 ram
Athlon 1 GHz CPU
ATI All-In-Wonder Pro (Rage Fury) Video Card
I have run the ASUS Probe and ATI Diagnostic software and they report no
problems. I also replaced the BIOS on-board battery. Also, I noted shortly
before the boot issues, that I had some very faint diagonal lines on the
video display, so this may be related. The problem is probably in the
motherboard, video card, or power supply, but I don't want to run out and
buy one piece, only to find it does not fix the problem, then buy another
new piece, only to find it also fails to fix the problem. Can anyone offer
some suggestions to try and isolate the problem component. If not, I will
probably use this as an excuse to upgrade the motherboard, CPU, RAM, video
card and case/powersupply.
TIA,
Brent