B
BrianEWilliams
I was trying to fix a system freezing problem discussed here:
http://groups-beta.google.com/group...read/thread/06232621c97a0516/e22a4ee5145e9f43
After trying many different things to fix the freezing problem, I had
walked away from it after doing a hard shut down, and then when I came
back a few hours later, it was dead. No video, no floppy
activity--just the basic spin up of the hard drive and system fans.
After trying many other things to bring a dead system back to life, I
saw that by booting up and holding down the DEL key, I had a "CMOS
Checksum Error" down at the bottom of the screen. None of the keys
worked from that point on.
The Asus P4R800-VM board is about 9 months old, and it had been working
normally (except for the freezing) all that time. I was doing a lot of
messing with drivers, XP system rollbacks, and removing PCI boards, but
I hadn't touched the BIOS before it died.
The board is on its way back to Asus, and I will post whatever they
tell me about the problem, but now I am wondering if it could have been
something as simple as a dead battery. Prior to noticing the CMOS
checksum error, but after the system had died, I did try taking the
battery out, and putting it back in. If that is the problem, I am
going to feel pretty foolish.
Here is the exact board I have:
http://usa.asus.com/products/mb/socket478/p4r800-vm/overview.htm
http://groups-beta.google.com/group...read/thread/06232621c97a0516/e22a4ee5145e9f43
After trying many different things to fix the freezing problem, I had
walked away from it after doing a hard shut down, and then when I came
back a few hours later, it was dead. No video, no floppy
activity--just the basic spin up of the hard drive and system fans.
After trying many other things to bring a dead system back to life, I
saw that by booting up and holding down the DEL key, I had a "CMOS
Checksum Error" down at the bottom of the screen. None of the keys
worked from that point on.
The Asus P4R800-VM board is about 9 months old, and it had been working
normally (except for the freezing) all that time. I was doing a lot of
messing with drivers, XP system rollbacks, and removing PCI boards, but
I hadn't touched the BIOS before it died.
The board is on its way back to Asus, and I will post whatever they
tell me about the problem, but now I am wondering if it could have been
something as simple as a dead battery. Prior to noticing the CMOS
checksum error, but after the system had died, I did try taking the
battery out, and putting it back in. If that is the problem, I am
going to feel pretty foolish.
Here is the exact board I have:
http://usa.asus.com/products/mb/socket478/p4r800-vm/overview.htm