PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

DESPERATE STRAITS!!!

 
 
Rohan Beckles
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Dec 2004
Help!!! --

I have an ASUS CUV4X-D with a dead CPU socket (CPU0). Some of the
components around the socket are damaged, probably happened when I
tried to install a waterblock.

Anyway, I have recently been in contact with ASUS. Their position is
that they will not repair the board due to its age, and they will not
release specs of the components in question, due to liability issues.

If anyone has any experience of repairing these boards, I would dearly
like to hear from them. I am based in the U.K., BTW.

Thanks & best regards,

Rohan Beckles
(E-Mail Removed)
--
ABIT VP6
Intel Pentium III "Coppermine" @ 1.0GHz (x2)
Crucial 256MB PC-133 SDRAM (x4)
Seagate Barracuda II 20.4GB
ABIT Siluro Ti4200 128MB 8xAGP OTES
NetGear FA310TX
Linux Kernel 2.4.28
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Noozer
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      25th Dec 2004

"Rohan Beckles" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41cc5fb8$0$12476$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Help!!! --
>
> I have an ASUS CUV4X-D with a dead CPU socket (CPU0). Some of the
> components around the socket are damaged, probably happened when I
> tried to install a waterblock.


I don't see any questions here, but I'm assuming you want to repair your
board...

It ain't gonna happen. Find a replacement.


 
Reply With Quote
 
Nero
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      25th Dec 2004
waste of time even thinking about repair.............................
too much to go wrong.


 
Reply With Quote
 
Nero
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      25th Dec 2004
Why should ASUS fix it???
you messed it up...................
if you owned a twenty year old Ford would you expect Ford to repair it???


 
Reply With Quote
 
notritenoteri
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      26th Dec 2004
I've repaired boards like that I use a 5 lb hammer and a trash can.
Oh yah you also need the price of a new MB
"Rohan Beckles" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41cc5fb8$0$12476$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Help!!! --
>
> I have an ASUS CUV4X-D with a dead CPU socket (CPU0). Some of the
> components around the socket are damaged, probably happened when I
> tried to install a waterblock.
>
> Anyway, I have recently been in contact with ASUS. Their position is
> that they will not repair the board due to its age, and they will not
> release specs of the components in question, due to liability issues.
>
> If anyone has any experience of repairing these boards, I would dearly
> like to hear from them. I am based in the U.K., BTW.
>
> Thanks & best regards,
>
> Rohan Beckles
> (E-Mail Removed)
> --
> ABIT VP6
> Intel Pentium III "Coppermine" @ 1.0GHz (x2)
> Crucial 256MB PC-133 SDRAM (x4)
> Seagate Barracuda II 20.4GB
> ABIT Siluro Ti4200 128MB 8xAGP OTES
> NetGear FA310TX
> Linux Kernel 2.4.28



 
Reply With Quote
 
Paul
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      4th Jan 2005
In article <41cc5fb8$0$12476$(E-Mail Removed)>, Rohan Beckles
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> Help!!! --
>
> I have an ASUS CUV4X-D with a dead CPU socket (CPU0). Some of the
> components around the socket are damaged, probably happened when I
> tried to install a waterblock.
>
> Anyway, I have recently been in contact with ASUS. Their position is
> that they will not repair the board due to its age, and they will not
> release specs of the components in question, due to liability issues.
>
> If anyone has any experience of repairing these boards, I would dearly
> like to hear from them. I am based in the U.K., BTW.
>
> Thanks & best regards,
>
> Rohan Beckles
> (E-Mail Removed)


There are two people who frequent the Abit newsgroup, and they
repair boards. In North America, there is "Homey"
(motherboardrepair.com). In the UK, there is "bigbadger", and
he can be reached via email.

Bigbadger can be reached via email by tacking @btinternet.com
onto the end of his name. He also goes by the name of steve
and you tack @thebageplace.fsnet.co.uk onto the end of steve.
(Got that from a Google search. I break up email addresses
as an antispam measure, for all the good it will do.)

Send an email to Bigbadger and get a quote for how much the
repair might cost. If it is simple things, like electrolytic
capacitors or MOSFETs, then it can be repaired. It really
depends on how much thermal damage there is to the motherboard
PCB itself (if the board is delaminated, tracks could be broken
and repair would be difficult without info from the factory).
Since you've done mechanical damage, the motherboard itself
should be in good shape. If any chips with high pin counts
are involved (Northbridge, Southbridge, processor socket), then
those are a little more high tech in terms of replacement
technique, and only a big shop might tackle a job like that.
Sourcing parts like that might require scavenging another
board, and the repair price would be astronomical. No matter
who replaces high pin count devices, there is always the
possibility that the repair doesn't work. (You can change
big chips a maximum of three times, if the board is in good
shape.)

If it is just small stuff damaged, it might be feasable to
repair it for US $50 to $100. If the board has sentimental
value to you, that is about the only reason I can see for
attempting a repair. The biggest challenge will be finding
a detailed picture of the board, so that the person doing
the repair will have some idea as to what was there. If
resistors were busted off, the repair person might never
know what value they were.

You could register at forums.2cpu.com and place a
"want to buy" advert for another CUV4X-D. You might get
lucky and find a UK seller willing to part with a
motherboard.

HTH,
Paul
 
Reply With Quote
 
aberger@u.washington.edu
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      4th Jan 2005
If the CPU socket is damaged and has to be replaced it doesn't make
economic sense to repair the board because of the effort required to
remove the old socket, clear the solder from the holes, clean the old
flux away and solder in a new socket. This could easily be a 3 hour job
with only a moderate probability of being successful. If you broken
some of the other components around the CPU, such as the elctrolytic
caps, then you might have a chance. Not too long ago a board of this
level of complexity might cost as much a s$500 for just the raw board,
then it made sense to attempt to fix it. Today you can buy an ECS
motherboard for an AthlonXP for around $60 US.

arnie

 
Reply With Quote
 
Ed
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      5th Jan 2005
On 4 Jan 2005 14:02:16 -0800, (E-Mail Removed) wrote:
<snip>
>Today you can buy an ECS
>motherboard for an AthlonXP for around $60 US.
>
>arnie


I wish the new Asus boards were $60!

Found a NF2 board for under $50 on pricewatch.com.....
ECS N2U400-A
nFORCE2 SPP/FSB 400/AGP 8X/DDR 400/USB 2.0/LAN
Retail Box $49.00

Ed

 
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
Performance Suddenly in Dire Straits Jake Leis Windows Vista Performance 4 25th Dec 2007 05:27 AM
Desperate for help drider629@gmail.com Microsoft Access Queries 1 16th Feb 2007 05:10 PM
I Am of Desperate Help =?Utf-8?B?U2lsZW50SW1wcmVzc2lvbg==?= Windows XP MovieMaker 4 30th Dec 2006 05:08 AM
I'm desperate. Please help! Kyle.H.Green@gmail.com Microsoft Access Form Coding 3 24th May 2006 06:59 PM
dire straits PMc Windows XP New Users 6 13th Sep 2003 12:39 AM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:44 AM.