PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

ASUS A7N8X Deluxe: Clock (watch) runs too fast!!

 
 
Roman Cwienk
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005
Hello,

since a few weeks the internal clock (watch) of my mainboard runs. It is
about +3 seconds per minute wrong, so I always have a wrong time on my PC.
There have no changes made on the OS (XP Prof.). This problem is very
annoying at e.g. ebay auctions, because each time I have to correct the time
manually.

Is this a problem onthe mainboard or of Windows XP?

Does anyone know this proble an a suggestion for solving it?

Thanks,
Roman
Austria


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Homer
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005
Replace the cell on the mother board if the time is changing when the
computer is off. If it is doing it when the computer is on then I have seen
some programs in the past that do this, they alter timing on the board when
they are running. It may be a problem with the mother board but I would look
at the other items first.

Homer

"Roman Cwienk" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41dbf478$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hello,
>
> since a few weeks the internal clock (watch) of my mainboard runs. It is
> about +3 seconds per minute wrong, so I always have a wrong time on my PC.
> There have no changes made on the OS (XP Prof.). This problem is very
> annoying at e.g. ebay auctions, because each time I have to correct the
> time
> manually.
>
> Is this a problem onthe mainboard or of Windows XP?
>
> Does anyone know this proble an a suggestion for solving it?
>
> Thanks,
> Roman
> Austria
>
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
Roman Cwienk
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005

"Homer" <(E-Mail Removed)> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:MKSdnaZtA_MHaEbcRVn-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Replace the cell on the mother board if the time is changing when the
> computer is off. If it is doing it when the computer is on then I have

seen
> some programs in the past that do this, they alter timing on the board

when
> they are running. It may be a problem with the mother board but I would

look
> at the other items first.
>


Thanks.

The problems appears only when XP is runnning. The battery is OK, I've
measured the voltage.
I alreday thought about a connection between this problem and some programs.
A lot of programs run on my PC.
If there is any list on the web, which says which programs can cause this
problem?

Best regards
Roman.


 
Reply With Quote
 
Apollo
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005

"Roman Cwienk" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41dbf478$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hello,
>
> since a few weeks the internal clock (watch) of my mainboard runs. It
> is
> about +3 seconds per minute wrong, so I always have a wrong time on my
> PC.
> There have no changes made on the OS (XP Prof.). This problem is very
> annoying at e.g. ebay auctions, because each time I have to correct
> the time
> manually.
>
> Is this a problem onthe mainboard or of Windows XP?
>
> Does anyone know this proble an a suggestion for solving it?
>


Hi

I've had this on 2 A7N8X dlx and 1 NF7-s, I believe it's hardware
related, but never got an answer or solution. With certain multipliers
they all keep time perfectly with others the time goes badly out, like
yours.

I gave up looking for an answer and now use Atomic Clock Sync;
http://www.worldtimeserver.com/atomic-clock/

HTH

--
Ian


 
Reply With Quote
 
Craig
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005

"Roman Cwienk" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41dbf478$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hello,
>
> since a few weeks the internal clock (watch) of my mainboard runs. It is
> about +3 seconds per minute wrong, so I always have a wrong time on my PC.
> There have no changes made on the OS (XP Prof.). This problem is very
> annoying at e.g. ebay auctions, because each time I have to correct the
> time
> manually.
>
> Is this a problem onthe mainboard or of Windows XP?
>
> Does anyone know this proble an a suggestion for solving it?
>
> Thanks,
> Roman
> Austria
>
>


Try changing your ntp time server in your clock setting to a different
server.
Are you on a broadband or a dial up internet connection?
Because you need a broadband internet connection to keep a constant
synchronizing
with the ntp time server. In other word dial up won't work in this case.
For a list of ntp time servers
http://support.microsoft.com/default...;EN-US;q262680

Craig


 
Reply With Quote
 
Paul
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005
In article <41dbf6f8$(E-Mail Removed)>, "Roman Cwienk"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> "Homer" <(E-Mail Removed)> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
> news:MKSdnaZtA_MHaEbcRVn-(E-Mail Removed)...
> > Replace the cell on the mother board if the time is changing when the
> > computer is off. If it is doing it when the computer is on then I have

> seen
> > some programs in the past that do this, they alter timing on the board

> when
> > they are running. It may be a problem with the mother board but I would

> look
> > at the other items first.
> >

>
> Thanks.
>
> The problems appears only when XP is runnning. The battery is OK, I've
> measured the voltage.
> I alreday thought about a connection between this problem and some programs.
> A lot of programs run on my PC.
> If there is any list on the web, which says which programs can cause this
> problem?
>
> Best regards
> Roman.


There is a long thread on nforcershq forums about this. They tried
a number of solutions, and disabling APIC in BIOS is a solution
that works for some people. Disabling APIC is also a workaround
for problems in Linux (it could well be in the kernel code now
for all I know). I vaguely remember some mention of spurious
interrupts when APIC is enabled. (Note - I am not saying ACPI,
which is Advanced Configuration and Power Interface. It is OK
to use the ACPI HAL in Windows, as far as I know. APIC is
Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller, and when APIC is
enabled in the BIOS, you'll see more than 16 IRQs in use by
Windows. When you disabled APIC in the BIOS, the Windows
allocation method will take the BIOS change into account,
and redistribute the IRQs to fit the reduced number space.)

It is too bad Nvidia doesn't publish errata for their
chipsets, so customers will know what to do.

See the quoted text in the fifth post down on this page.
If you have time, read the whole thread, as many people
spent time battling this problem. An alternate way to
try to solve the problem, is have a permanent Internet
connection and use NTP to resync the faulty clock.

http://nforcershq.com/forum/viewtopi...9631&start=190

HTH,
Paul
 
Reply With Quote
 
Muerta
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      6th Jan 2005

"Roman Cwienk" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41dbf478$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hello,
>
> since a few weeks the internal clock (watch) of my mainboard runs. It is
> about +3 seconds per minute wrong, so I always have a wrong time on my PC.
> There have no changes made on the OS (XP Prof.). This problem is very
> annoying at e.g. ebay auctions, because each time I have to correct the
> time
> manually.
>
> Is this a problem onthe mainboard or of Windows XP?
>
> Does anyone know this proble an a suggestion for solving it?
>
> Thanks,
> Roman
> Austria



Roman,

I used the same board and XP Pro when I did my current build.

Haunting the group at the time, I saw this problem posted, and it was
common.

The fix given at the time, was something about going into bios and disabling
spread spectrum. I did this on initial setup, and have never experienced a
problem with the clock.

Perhaps someone with better recollection than mine can add, but this may be
what you're looking for.



 
Reply With Quote
 
Apollo
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      6th Jan 2005

"Muerta" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:yE7Dd.713$(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> I used the same board and XP Pro when I did my current build.
>
> Haunting the group at the time, I saw this problem posted, and it was
> common.
>
> The fix given at the time, was something about going into bios and
> disabling spread spectrum. I did this on initial setup, and have never
> experienced a problem with the clock.
>
> Perhaps someone with better recollection than mine can add, but this
> may be what you're looking for.
>


I always disable that anyway, supposed to improve stability when
overclocking, and my clocks still out by a couple of seconds a minute.
I'm convinced it's linked to the cpu/fsb/multi timing somehow, as I said
at certain multi's the clocks run fine and at others it can go out by up
to 5 mins / hour.

Running at 11.5 x 220 at the moment and getting about +16 seconds an
hour.

--
Ian


 
Reply With Quote
 
Gonçalo
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      7th Jan 2005
Also the same problem. Solution: Shutdown the PC and disconnect from all
sources of energy. Do it for 3/4 min, it should solve the problem. It
happens to me when the uptime is bigger than 50/60 days.



"Apollo" <ian_dunbar6@hot[un-munge-me]mail.com> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> "Muerta" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:yE7Dd.713$(E-Mail Removed)...
>>
>> I used the same board and XP Pro when I did my current build.
>>
>> Haunting the group at the time, I saw this problem posted, and it was
>> common.
>>
>> The fix given at the time, was something about going into bios and
>> disabling spread spectrum. I did this on initial setup, and have never
>> experienced a problem with the clock.
>>
>> Perhaps someone with better recollection than mine can add, but this may
>> be what you're looking for.
>>

>
> I always disable that anyway, supposed to improve stability when
> overclocking, and my clocks still out by a couple of seconds a minute. I'm
> convinced it's linked to the cpu/fsb/multi timing somehow, as I said at
> certain multi's the clocks run fine and at others it can go out by up to 5
> mins / hour.
>
> Running at 11.5 x 220 at the moment and getting about +16 seconds an hour.
>
> --
> Ian
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Asus A7N8X deluxe and real time clock VP Asus Motherboards 0 14th Aug 2004 12:24 AM
Re: A7n8x Deluxe Fast Clock edde Asus Motherboards 3 27th Jun 2004 08:45 AM
A7n8x Deluxe Fast Clock edde Asus Motherboards 1 23rd Jun 2004 07:53 AM
A7N8X Deluxe -- Real Time Clock Runs Fast jim evans Asus Motherboards 3 17th Jan 2004 12:07 AM
Re: Fast Clock on A7N8X Deluxe Bruce MacDonald Asus Motherboards 2 26th Jun 2003 03:55 AM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:48 PM.