Jump to content
Compatible Support Forums
Sign in to follow this  
JBrave715

Upgraded my computer... I think. :/

Recommended Posts

Ok I'm going to try to explain this as good as I can and then anyone can give me opinions on what the problem could be.

 

I just upgraded to an athlon thunderbird 800 with an Asus A7V motherboard and 128 megs of ram PC 133. For the life of me the thing won't do jack. When I first turned it on I had built it completely I made all the connections but it didn't give me any picture on the monitor nor did it make any beeps from the system speaker (the fans came on and the Hard Drive light came on). So I troubleshooted I disconnected everything except for the hard drive and I got the same thing. And to be a little more detailed, here is exactly what it does. I flip on the power supply switch (the system immediatly turns on without pressing the power switch on the front, which I find odd) everything seems to come on, fans, the Floppy grinds (in a strange way), Oddly my Hard drive will not unless I unplug the cable rom the mother board (nore will the other HD or cd rom drive). Anyway the system seems to freeze I get no Keyboard activity the Hard drive and floppy lights stay lit and of cource no picture on the monitor or beeps from the system speaker. If I unplug all the power from everything but my mother board I will hear faint endless beeps from the system speaker. I have a 230 Watt power supply I have ordered a 300 Watt that will arive tomorrow I'm hoping that's the problem, but my "computer expert" brother in law says that even if I didn't have enough power unpluging power from everything except the mother board should still give me something. I would apreciate some input on what this could be so I can be more prepared on getting this thing up and running. Thanks.

Share this post


Link to post

Initially, I would check the connections to the motherbaord.

 

You should have a row of pins where you plug on things like the speaker, power LED, hard drive LED and so-on. It could be some of those are wrong and are causing problems.

 

Pull them all off and try again.

 

What video card are you using? If it's AGP and you have a PCI card kicking about, try that instead.

 

If it's a PCI card, you probably won't have an AGP card lying about, but can you borrow one to try it?

Share this post


Link to post

I had a similar problem when I first built my system: lights, camera, no action, and nothing telling me there was something wrong. then my friend told me to make sure my chip was seated properly, since sometimes the chip needs to be held down while locking the ZIF socket, or it won't be in all the way. So try reseating your chip. Failing that, I would try to swap your parts out with other known working parts and see if you may have gotten a bad chip/board/something.

 

AM I the olny one that kicka HUGE kick out of making Tony Hakw fall flat on has ass in the Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 Demo? that sends me to bed happy nightly... well, that and pr0n.

 

Good luck,

-bZj

 

[This message has been edited by Down8 (edited 26 October 2000).]

Share this post


Link to post

If you have a spare memory dimm try with that one instead. I don't remember how many times i had problems like yours because of bad memory modules.

Share this post


Link to post

Providing your motherboard, CPU and system speaker are not f*cked, you should be able to pull everything else (yes, even all LEDs etc) off the board (apart from the ATX power supply connection), then power it on:

 

If you get nothing, no beeps or anything, its probable that the ATX PSU (case)/board and/or CPU are dead(as speakers generally never fail) and one or all items will need to be replaced. Try testing the CPU at your favourite PC shop or at a friends house to rule out CPU failure.

 

Otherwise you'll get a beep error code, telling you various part(s) failed the POST. You can then add parts one by one (eg add the stick of RAM, then the AGP card etc) and see if you can identify the problem.

 

Its very important to change only one thing at a time. I cannot stress that enough with thses sort of problems.... good luck!

Share this post


Link to post

I had the same problem with my curren mobo.

 

First of all Athlons (all K7's) need a massive power supply. At least 300W and AMD approved. My old PSU (pre athlon) was 250W. When I pressed the power button all that would happen is that the case fan would rotate a quarter turn. Thats all! I disconnected everything, and it would come alive, but only until the video was initialised. Then it just died (power off).

 

I got an athlon approved PSU. Set it up, still nothing. The PC shop Sound Technology Systems said they had had the same reports. So I took it back and all the PSUs were sent back. So I got a new one, with a different HI-POT date and it is working perfectly.

 

But before you embarass yourself make sure you have connected the power on switch to the correct pins, not suspend or sleep, or some other obsure thing. I do it all the time, and I have had friends and friends of friends, the odd driving instructor!, and people I don't even know turn up at my house with a new motherboard that doesn't work for this reason.

 

Oh, also, I bought a athlon motherboard from www.dabs.com, and this was before I had my approved power supply. Apparantly the board can be damaged if the power supply is not powerful enough. Haste to say, the board never worked (oops <:-D ), still the dabs people though it was a cache problem, and took it back.

 

Also make sure if the board allows normal AT power connects that the correct switch is set. IE ATX/AT is set to ATX.

 

 

------------------

System Spec:

Athlon 800

Gigabyte GA-7IXE F4

128Mb SSi PC100

Radeon 64Mb DDR (oem and proud of it)

Hauppauge Wintv Model 406

Realtek 8029 LAN (cnx to ISDN server)

Creative ES1371 PCI64v smile

Creative SBlive Value frown

Creative 48mx CDROM

Memorex TriMaxx200(DVD/CDR/CDRW/CD, 4,6,4,24)

Segate SS330630A 30Gb 7200 ATA4

LS120

Share this post


Link to post

Ahh, the trials and tribulations of building an Athlon. Here's a few things that I messed up, I mean I hear that other people messed up :), when I built mine:

 

1. Make 100% sure the Athlon is in all the way. That bugger is a pain to get in sometimes, and the first Athlon I built didn't even power on at first because the processor wasn't properly seated.

 

2. Make 110% sure the video card is properly seated. The second Athlon I built wouldn't boot because the video card wasn't in all the way.

 

3. Check to see the power connectors are all in the right place. While trying to figure out why my first Athlon wouldn't boot (that unseated processor again) I accidentally unplugged the case power connector, and then plugged it in wrong; I think I swapped it with the speaker or something else really stupid. Same goes for the ATX power connector, though that's not as easy to mess up as those AT connectors (why must they give you two identical-looking connectors that are not swappable?).

 

4. The floppy drive and hard drive problems sound all too familiar to me. smile Try disconnecting the floppy drive. My third Athlon did the very same thing and wouldn't boot because the floppy connector was in backwards.

 

5. I second euankirkhope's suggestion to get a decent PS. Your "computer expert" brother in law would be right, except that Athlons eat wattage for breakfast, and you need a minimum of a 250W power supply on most Athlon motherboards just to power the motherboard and processor, let alone peripherals. I'd be shocked if it even POSTed with 230W.

 

Hope this helps.

Share this post


Link to post

I recently built a new machine and experienced this problem. I had mixed up the system connection pins. As a result not only would the system not POST, but the machine would power on with just a PSU switch on.

 

Check those cables smile

 

 

 

------------------

 

Regards

Kristian Dorey AMIAP

Share this post


Link to post

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×