PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Beeps at Boot-up

 
 
Matt
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      9th May 2006
Hey guys. Got quite a serious problem here.

For some random reason, about 2 days ago my computer would not start
up. The computer would get as far as spinning up the hard drive and
fans (so we're talking the first few seconds after you press the power
ON button) then just as it is about to reach the opening screen where
the BIOS information and memory test is performed, the computer starts
beeping at me.

The sequence was always the same and went as follows:

1 long beep, followed by 2 short beeps.

After that nothing else would happen. I began to get a bit worried so I
took my case off and checked my RAM and peripheral cards were secure.
Upon re-attaching the case the PC ran fine, but crashed on me after
about an hour of light use, no games or anything like that.

Since then I can get it to boot about 1 in every 5 attempts, it seems
to be an entirely random (ie. it doesn't only happen when the computer
has been on for hours and it quite hot). Basically I'm getting a bit
fed-up with all this messing about. I need my computer to work reliably
at the moment so I need to identify what this problem is.

According to the Award website (my BIOS manufacturer) the beep sequence
is a graphics card problem. However, I have read elsewhere that it
could also be pointing to a RAM or CPU problem. So I need some
clarification before I go out and spend money on a new graphics card!

One last bit of info I can give you though: From this morning onwards,
my computer (when it does boot up that is) runs very slowly once it
gets into Windows. All the images that come up on the screen appear
with a scrolling effect (ie. no images just appear at once, but appear
bit by bit with the top of the image first and the bottom last - a bit
like the effect in Powerpoint). I have tried reinstalling my graphics
card drivers and the problem appeared to go away when I uninstalled the
old drivers - but it came right back as soon as the drivers were
reinstalled.

I've never heard of anything like this so I could really do with some
help. I've given my PC specs below but if anyone needs any more
information please do not hesistate to ask.

Kind Regards,

Matt

PC Specs:

CPU: AMD Athlon XP 2000+
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-7VAX KT400 Chipset
RAM: 1.25GB PC2700 DDR
Graphics Card: Connect3D Radeon 9550 256MB AGP
Operating System: Windows XP SP2

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Michael Walraven
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      9th May 2006
Uninstalling the drivers probably resulted in using the 'standard' VGA
800x600 mode drivers that windows defaults
to. This driver puts a minimum strain on the video and doesn't use any of
the features on your card (i.e. may not be using areas
of memory on the video card that are going bad).

I would suggest that you go back to removing the display drivers and run for
awhile in that mode (ugly I agree). If your machine
seems to be otherwise functional then consider pulling the video card,
cleaning its board contacts gently (soft pencil eraser works well).
Also remove any memory or other items from the video card, inspect and clean
contacts and reassemble the thing.

General hits for fixing erratic machines include removing all devices except
keyboard and display. Then add things back one at a time
(memory - mouse - modem - ethernet card etc till you get back to failures).
If there was a bad connector problem you might just get lucky
and by the time you get it all back together it works!

Have fun,
Michael



"Matt" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hey guys. Got quite a serious problem here.
>
> For some random reason, about 2 days ago my computer would not start
> up. The computer would get as far as spinning up the hard drive and
> fans (so we're talking the first few seconds after you press the power
> ON button) then just as it is about to reach the opening screen where
> the BIOS information and memory test is performed, the computer starts
> beeping at me.
>
> The sequence was always the same and went as follows:
>
> 1 long beep, followed by 2 short beeps.
>
> After that nothing else would happen. I began to get a bit worried so I
> took my case off and checked my RAM and peripheral cards were secure.
> Upon re-attaching the case the PC ran fine, but crashed on me after
> about an hour of light use, no games or anything like that.
>
> Since then I can get it to boot about 1 in every 5 attempts, it seems
> to be an entirely random (ie. it doesn't only happen when the computer
> has been on for hours and it quite hot). Basically I'm getting a bit
> fed-up with all this messing about. I need my computer to work reliably
> at the moment so I need to identify what this problem is.
>
> According to the Award website (my BIOS manufacturer) the beep sequence
> is a graphics card problem. However, I have read elsewhere that it
> could also be pointing to a RAM or CPU problem. So I need some
> clarification before I go out and spend money on a new graphics card!
>
> One last bit of info I can give you though: From this morning onwards,
> my computer (when it does boot up that is) runs very slowly once it
> gets into Windows. All the images that come up on the screen appear
> with a scrolling effect (ie. no images just appear at once, but appear
> bit by bit with the top of the image first and the bottom last - a bit
> like the effect in Powerpoint). I have tried reinstalling my graphics
> card drivers and the problem appeared to go away when I uninstalled the
> old drivers - but it came right back as soon as the drivers were
> reinstalled.
>
> I've never heard of anything like this so I could really do with some
> help. I've given my PC specs below but if anyone needs any more
> information please do not hesistate to ask.
>
> Kind Regards,
>
> Matt
>
> PC Specs:
>
> CPU: AMD Athlon XP 2000+
> Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-7VAX KT400 Chipset
> RAM: 1.25GB PC2700 DDR
> Graphics Card: Connect3D Radeon 9550 256MB AGP
> Operating System: Windows XP SP2
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
tarper@t-online.de
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      9th May 2006
Matt wrote:

> 1 long beep, followed by 2 short beeps.

(...)
> I have tried reinstalling my graphics
> card drivers and the problem appeared to go away when I uninstalled the
> old drivers - but it came right back as soon as the drivers were
> reinstalled.


So it's very likely that your graphics card is about to die.

My suggestion to narrow down the problem:

"Downgrade" to unaccellerated standard VGA for testing. As you discovered,
the problem seems to disappear when you deinstall the drivers of your
graphics card. Give it a try.

Then check the RAM in size and integrity, but I doubt that this is the cause
of your problem.

To be really sure, verify that your CPU is running at the speed you expect.

If all this doesn't result in another component being responsible for the
crashes, it's most likely to be your graphics card.

Components of nowaday's complexity don't die in an instance like a bulb. The
weakest part dies first probably without your notice, then the next and so
on until you notice. Your graphics card is such a complex component. You
mentioned games in your original post. This e.g. requires graphics
accelleration. To provide this, modern graphics cards are some kind of
computers within the computer. They are specialized in calculating
graphics. Higher resolutions than VGA(640x480 256 colors) provided by the
OS also rely on parts of this specialized co-computing. That's what the
driver is for. And some part of this appears to be broken

Greetings

Tarper

 
Reply With Quote
 
Michael W. Ryder
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      9th May 2006
Matt wrote:
> Hey guys. Got quite a serious problem here.
>
> For some random reason, about 2 days ago my computer would not start
> up. The computer would get as far as spinning up the hard drive and
> fans (so we're talking the first few seconds after you press the power
> ON button) then just as it is about to reach the opening screen where
> the BIOS information and memory test is performed, the computer starts
> beeping at me.
>
> The sequence was always the same and went as follows:
>
> 1 long beep, followed by 2 short beeps.
>
> After that nothing else would happen. I began to get a bit worried so I
> took my case off and checked my RAM and peripheral cards were secure.
> Upon re-attaching the case the PC ran fine, but crashed on me after
> about an hour of light use, no games or anything like that.
>
> Since then I can get it to boot about 1 in every 5 attempts, it seems
> to be an entirely random (ie. it doesn't only happen when the computer
> has been on for hours and it quite hot). Basically I'm getting a bit
> fed-up with all this messing about. I need my computer to work reliably
> at the moment so I need to identify what this problem is.
>
> According to the Award website (my BIOS manufacturer) the beep sequence
> is a graphics card problem. However, I have read elsewhere that it
> could also be pointing to a RAM or CPU problem. So I need some
> clarification before I go out and spend money on a new graphics card!
>
> One last bit of info I can give you though: From this morning onwards,
> my computer (when it does boot up that is) runs very slowly once it
> gets into Windows. All the images that come up on the screen appear
> with a scrolling effect (ie. no images just appear at once, but appear
> bit by bit with the top of the image first and the bottom last - a bit
> like the effect in Powerpoint). I have tried reinstalling my graphics
> card drivers and the problem appeared to go away when I uninstalled the
> old drivers - but it came right back as soon as the drivers were
> reinstalled.
>
> I've never heard of anything like this so I could really do with some
> help. I've given my PC specs below but if anyone needs any more
> information please do not hesistate to ask.
>


Have you tried to go into the BIOS when it does let you boot up and
check the temperatures, fan speeds, etc? Also have you tried using a
program like Speedfan while in Windows to monitor the temperatures and
voltages? You may have a problem with the CPU overheating which would
explain the slow running or you might have a failing power supply that
would explain the power on problems.


> Kind Regards,
>
> Matt
>
> PC Specs:
>
> CPU: AMD Athlon XP 2000+
> Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-7VAX KT400 Chipset
> RAM: 1.25GB PC2700 DDR
> Graphics Card: Connect3D Radeon 9550 256MB AGP
> Operating System: Windows XP SP2
>

 
Reply With Quote
 
Agent_C
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th May 2006
On 9 May 2006 13:19:32 -0700, "Matt" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>The sequence was always the same and went as follows:
>
>1 long beep, followed by 2 short beeps.


http://www.amptron.com/html/bios.beepcodes.html

A_C

 
Reply With Quote
 
Matt
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th May 2006
> Have you tried to go into the BIOS when it does let you boot up and
> check the temperatures, fan speeds, etc? Also have you tried using a
> program like Speedfan while in Windows to monitor the temperatures and
> voltages? You may have a problem with the CPU overheating which would
> explain the slow running or you might have a failing power supply that
> would explain the power on problems.


Sadly the computer doesn't get that far. I've got Speedfan running and
nothing seems to be out of place so far. The beep code website given
seems to strongly suggest it's a graphics card issue, but thanks for
the suggestions all the same.

Regards,

Matt

 
Reply With Quote
 
mattb95@hotmail.com
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th May 2006
I have just put the case back on my computer and as soon as I did the
screen went all fuzzy and the computer locked up. Now when I try to
boot up all I get is the beeps.

So I've taken out my card and put an old card I had lying around in.
Now it boots up but I still get the stuttering when I scrtoll up and
down, though this could be due to my card being a PCI Riva TNT with
only 16Mb of video RAM (ancient I know!)

Anyway - a program that tests your graphics card for faults would be
enough to convince me to send it back, I don't want to run the risk of
the card actually being ok and then not getting a refund (thankfully
it's still under warranty).

Kind regards,

Matt

 
Reply With Quote
 
Travis King
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th May 2006
The video card's probably dead. I had an NVIDIA GeForce FX5600 that did the
same thing. It was artifacting like crazy (as it was underclocked because
it was a cheap piece of junk) then I turned my head from the screen for a
second and looked back and the whole screen went blurry. I've used a RIVA
TNT with 16MB of video RAM for a short time in my computer to get me by for
a week (AGP) and it made my computer very slow and yes, scrolling was slow
and it made the whole computer slow down. This was with Windows XP.
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>I have just put the case back on my computer and as soon as I did the
> screen went all fuzzy and the computer locked up. Now when I try to
> boot up all I get is the beeps.
>
> So I've taken out my card and put an old card I had lying around in.
> Now it boots up but I still get the stuttering when I scrtoll up and
> down, though this could be due to my card being a PCI Riva TNT with
> only 16Mb of video RAM (ancient I know!)
>
> Anyway - a program that tests your graphics card for faults would be
> enough to convince me to send it back, I don't want to run the risk of
> the card actually being ok and then not getting a refund (thankfully
> it's still under warranty).
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Matt
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
Dromiz
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th May 2006
Also look in your computer motherboard book to see what the beep mean.
There is not standard for the beep codes. The error could be almost
anything other than the graphics card (like as easy as the keyboard or a
dead battery on the motherboard)

"Matt" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hey guys. Got quite a serious problem here.
>
> For some random reason, about 2 days ago my computer would not start
> up. The computer would get as far as spinning up the hard drive and
> fans (so we're talking the first few seconds after you press the power
> ON button) then just as it is about to reach the opening screen where
> the BIOS information and memory test is performed, the computer starts
> beeping at me.
>
> The sequence was always the same and went as follows:
>
> 1 long beep, followed by 2 short beeps.
>
> After that nothing else would happen. I began to get a bit worried so I
> took my case off and checked my RAM and peripheral cards were secure.
> Upon re-attaching the case the PC ran fine, but crashed on me after
> about an hour of light use, no games or anything like that.
>
> Since then I can get it to boot about 1 in every 5 attempts, it seems
> to be an entirely random (ie. it doesn't only happen when the computer
> has been on for hours and it quite hot). Basically I'm getting a bit
> fed-up with all this messing about. I need my computer to work reliably
> at the moment so I need to identify what this problem is.
>
> According to the Award website (my BIOS manufacturer) the beep sequence
> is a graphics card problem. However, I have read elsewhere that it
> could also be pointing to a RAM or CPU problem. So I need some
> clarification before I go out and spend money on a new graphics card!
>
> One last bit of info I can give you though: From this morning onwards,
> my computer (when it does boot up that is) runs very slowly once it
> gets into Windows. All the images that come up on the screen appear
> with a scrolling effect (ie. no images just appear at once, but appear
> bit by bit with the top of the image first and the bottom last - a bit
> like the effect in Powerpoint). I have tried reinstalling my graphics
> card drivers and the problem appeared to go away when I uninstalled the
> old drivers - but it came right back as soon as the drivers were
> reinstalled.
>
> I've never heard of anything like this so I could really do with some
> help. I've given my PC specs below but if anyone needs any more
> information please do not hesistate to ask.
>
> Kind Regards,
>
> Matt
>
> PC Specs:
>
> CPU: AMD Athlon XP 2000+
> Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-7VAX KT400 Chipset
> RAM: 1.25GB PC2700 DDR
> Graphics Card: Connect3D Radeon 9550 256MB AGP
> Operating System: Windows XP SP2
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
mattb95@hotmail.com
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th May 2006
Travis King wrote:
> The video card's probably dead. I had an NVIDIA GeForce FX5600 that did the
> same thing. It was artifacting like crazy (as it was underclocked because
> it was a cheap piece of junk) then I turned my head from the screen for a
> second and looked back and the whole screen went blurry. I've used a RIVA
> TNT with 16MB of video RAM for a short time in my computer to get me by for
> a week (AGP) and it made my computer very slow and yes, scrolling was slow
> and it made the whole computer slow down. This was with Windows XP.


I've managed to get hold of my old GeForce 2 GTS card, and after
installing the 53.03 drivers from the nVidia website's archive (as the
brand new drivers don't seem to work with this card) the slow scrolling
speed (or artificing if that's it's correct term!) has gone. If the
beeping problem now stays away for good I think I've solved the
mystery.

Unfortunately, Dabs.com (the retailer I bnought it from) will not offer
a refund on items purchased over 28 days ago. Instead, they will send
it off for repair, which can take up to 6 weeks. Is this legal? I mean
if I didn't have backup graphics cards from past machines I wouldn't be
able to use my computer until the card was repaired.

Ideally I want to do away with this faulty card altogether, not get it
repaired. With a refund I can go out and buy a Geforce of a similar
spec that won't break on me.

Kind regards,

Matt

 
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
Beeps at Boot-up Matt DIY PC 14 7th Jun 2006 11:51 PM
HP WON'T BOOT UP. JUST SEVEN BEEPS JOHN Windows XP General 3 6th Jun 2004 11:16 AM
USB and boot beeps The Plebism Asus Motherboards 2 19th May 2004 08:14 AM
Boot up Error and beeps Jeff Houston Microsoft Windows 2000 3 13th May 2004 07:58 AM
beeps on boot-up Megan Microsoft Windows 2000 1 19th Apr 2004 02:27 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:57 AM.