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Failed Asus motherboard
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Failed Asus motherboard |
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#1 |
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Guest
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My P4S8X mobo failed while I was in Internet Explorer. I lost the
signal to the monitor, and just as this happened, I heard the bios voice message about some type of system failure, but I don't know what the complete message was. The computer would not respond to ctrl-alt-del. I had to power-down by holding in the power button. After turning power back on, I noticed the following: 1) Still no signal to monitor; So I turned it on manually; 2) the red light under the power button came on for a few seconds, but there was no typical "beep" that you normally hear after turning power on. 3) No memory check, in fact, nothing appearing on display at all; 4) Cannot enter bios; 5) and the boot sequence would not initiate, although power was present. Perhaps some of you with more experience can advise me whether this could have been done by a virus (didn't have AV software installed;I suppose a virus could erase CMOS coding), or whether it's a bad mobo. Finally, if it could be a virus, how would I check/clean the contents of the hard drive without damaging another computer? Thanks, Sean |
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#2 |
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Sean Fleming Babbled on and on and on about:
> My P4S8X mobo failed while I was in Internet Explorer. I lost the > signal to the monitor, and just as this happened, I heard the bios > voice message about some type of system failure, but I don't know what > the complete message was. The computer would not respond to > ctrl-alt-del. I had to power-down by holding in the power button. > > After turning power back on, I noticed the following: > 1) Still no signal to monitor; So I turned it on manually; > 2) the red light under the power button came on for a few seconds, but > there was no typical "beep" that you normally hear after turning power > on. > 3) No memory check, in fact, nothing appearing on display at all; > 4) Cannot enter bios; > 5) and the boot sequence would not initiate, although power was > present. > > > Perhaps some of you with more experience can advise me whether this > could have been done by a virus (didn't have AV software installed;I > suppose a virus could erase CMOS coding), or whether it's a bad mobo. > > Finally, if it could be a virus, how would I check/clean the contents > of the hard drive without damaging another computer? > > Thanks, > Sean There are virii out there that will supposedly erase BIOS settings (go to symantec and look at some of the variations of Magistr) but I have never heard of them actually working correctly, so I think it is safe to assume that it was not caused by a virus, but rather a hardware failure. Check your vid card, make sure it's seated, check in another system as well, along with RAM etc. Unplug all drives and peripherals one at a time until (if ever) it posts. If it doesn't- assume motherboard failure, because CPU's go down so very rarely. VERY IMPORTANT to check for a faulty power supply too. IMO- from my expereince with ASUS boards- I would just ship the damn thing back. They are an over-rated piece of junk- no offence meant. I RMA more ASUS boards than all others combined. I remember the good old days, when you couldn't trust anything BUT an ASUS board. Guess those days are gone. Go with a Gigabyte or MSI, you won't be dissappointed. Side note... if you are still worried about it being a virus on your harddrive you can do one of three things: 1. Attach it (hard drive) to another system as a slave and scan it. This will get any of the executable files, as well as infected files, but will not fix any registry entries etc. You will have to do that by hand after. 2. Fdisk. Use the command fdisk /mbr first to destroy the master boot record, then do a standard Fdisk just to be sure. This will get rid of those pesky boot sector virii. Upon completion of Fdisk, format shamelessly. 3. Do a total kill of your disk (don't confuse this with a low level format) using a proprietary (or third person) zero write utility. Use the proprietary before anything else. Be warned that there is no hope of recovering anything once you do this, so back up your files to another machine if you need them (Don't say I didn't warn you ;-)). -- Wheaty... Gimme the ball... puhhllleeeeaaasssse gimme the ball! |
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