REVscene - Vancouver Automotive Forum


Welcome to the REVscene Automotive Forum forums.

Registration is Free!You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! The banners on the left side and below do not show for registered users!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.


Go Back   REVscene Automotive Forum > Vancouver LifeStyles (VLS) > Gaming, Computer Tech & Electronics

Gaming, Computer Tech & Electronics Fortnite.CounterStrike.CallOfDuty.Dota.MineCraft.
Tips & tricks, tech support, home theatre, online gaming, reviews, latest news...

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 01-05-2015, 11:26 PM   #1
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
Computer shorted?Broken?

power went out while the computer was on. now it won't turn on/boot at all.

i opened it up and the clrtc (clear cmos) LED on my motherboard is blinking.

I tried to clear cmos by using unplugging the psu and using the 2-3 jumper pin method. Didn't work.

I then tried the pull cmos battery for 15minute method. Didn't work, CLRTC LED still blinking.

To run diagnostics, I unplugged everything from the PSU and only left the Cd-drive plugged in.

I then shorted my PSU with the 'paperclip green wire to ground method'. The PSU fan was running and the optical drive was able to open and close. (does this mean that the PSU is fully functional? I've never had the psu on without the case fan so i don't know if it's supposed to be this quiet.)

What are my next steps?

Since it won't boot at all, I'm guessing it is the motherboard is fried? do power surges commonly break other components as well such as the ram/hdd/gpu/cpu?

It is a sabertooth x58 TUF series so even though i bought it sometime in 2010-2011, i might still be covered in the TUF 5 year warranty. or are fried motherboards usually not covered in warranty?
Advertisement
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 12:54 AM   #2
RS has made me the bitter person i am today!
 
Hehe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: YVR/TPE
Posts: 4,988
Thanked 3,076 Times in 1,343 Posts
Failed 661 Times in 212 Posts
In order to tell whether your mobo is fried you need another psu to test it out.

Assuming the led is still blinking, the mobo is getting some power, so I wouldn't rule it out as yet.

What I'd do is take the battery out, disconnect everything but power, cpu, and one memory (swap between the modules you have) and see what happen. Oh, and leave the battery out for now. (Not sure if you did, but power needs to be out for it to clear)
__________________
Nothing for now
Hehe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 01:46 AM   #3
Where's my RS Christmas Lobster?!
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 892
Thanked 38 Times in 36 Posts
Failed 10 Times in 6 Posts
Are you sure the blinking LED is labeled "CLRTC"?
I have never heard of such an LED.
John is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 06:18 AM   #4
To me, there is the Internet and there is RS
 
underscore's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Okanagan
Posts: 17,342
Thanked 10,127 Times in 4,418 Posts
Failed 435 Times in 233 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hehe View Post
What I'd do is take the battery out, disconnect everything but power, cpu, and one memory (swap between the modules you have) and see what happen.
Also swap between the RAM slots on the mobo as well if it doesn't boot with any of the modules. ie module 1 in slot 1, test, module 2 in slot 1, test. module 1 in slot 2, test, etc etc etc.
__________________
1991 Toyota Celica GTFour RC // 2007 Toyota Rav4 V6 // 2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee
1992 Toyota Celica GT-S ["sold"] \\ 2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee CRD [sold] \\ 2000 Jeep Cherokee [sold] \\ 1997 Honda Prelude [sold] \\ 1992 Jeep YJ [sold/crashed] \\ 1987 Mazda RX-7 [sold] \\ 1987 Toyota Celica GT-S [crushed]
Quote:
Originally Posted by maksimizer View Post
half those dudes are hotter than ,my GF.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RevYouUp View Post
reading this thread is like waiting for goku to charge up a spirit bomb in dragon ball z
Quote:
Originally Posted by Good_KarMa View Post
OH thank god. I thought u had sex with my wife. :cry:
underscore is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 06:44 AM   #5
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hehe View Post
In order to tell whether your mobo is fried you need another psu to test it out.

Assuming the led is still blinking, the mobo is getting some power, so I wouldn't rule it out as yet.

What I'd do is take the battery out, disconnect everything but power, cpu, and one memory (swap between the modules you have) and see what happen. Oh, and leave the battery out for now. (Not sure if you did, but power needs to be out for it to clear)
Yeah i had all the power disconnected and held on to the power button for discharge before trying both methods of clear. will try again with swapping rams.


Quote:
Originally Posted by John View Post
Are you sure the blinking LED is labeled "CLRTC"?
I have never heard of such an LED.
you are right, it might not be a clrtc LED.

it is an LED nonetheless and all it does is blink.




The thing is, the PSU fan doesn't even turn on when hooked up to the MOBO which leads to me to believe that it HAS to be the mobo?

But it does turn on when I'm shorting it and have it hooked up only to the optical drive which works.

any help is appreciated. thanks guys.
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 06:55 AM   #6
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
also forgot to mention that there is a faint tick sound that goes along with the LED blinking.

the led starts blinking as soon as i turn my PSU on, (i don't even need to press the computer power button)
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 06:58 AM   #7
RS has made me the bitter person i am today!
 
Hehe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: YVR/TPE
Posts: 4,988
Thanked 3,076 Times in 1,343 Posts
Failed 661 Times in 212 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by geeknerd View Post
Yeah i had all the power disconnected and held on to the power button for discharge before trying both methods of clear. will try again with swapping rams.




you are right, it might not be a clrtc LED.

it is an LED nonetheless and all it does is blink.

http://i.imgur.com/Hn52mC9.jpg


The thing is, the PSU fan doesn't even turn on when hooked up to the MOBO which leads to me to believe that it HAS to be the mobo?

But it does turn on when I'm shorting it and have it hooked up only to the optical drive which works.

any help is appreciated. thanks guys.
It's very rare to encounter a fried mobo. The reason is that mobo gets its power from PSU. And the PSU basically stabilizes anything coming in before outputting to the mobo.

You get a fried mobo when you are OCing and messing up too much with the voltage setting, but very rarely from a sudden loss of power.

I can see some other parts going down, but not the mobo especially considering the one you have is not a cheapo one.
__________________
Nothing for now
Hehe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 08:00 AM   #8
To me, there is the Internet and there is RS
 
underscore's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Okanagan
Posts: 17,342
Thanked 10,127 Times in 4,418 Posts
Failed 435 Times in 233 Posts
CLRTC is the name of that jumper, not the LED. Here's the procedure for clearing the CMOS:

ASUSTeK Computer Inc. -Support-

Quote:
1st step: PC power shut down and removes power cable.

2nd step: CLRTC_SW has 3 pins. Short 1-2 pins for default setup. If you would like clear CMOS setting data & temporary data in south bridge, please short 2-3 pins by jumper for 10 sec. When you finish clean CMOS process, please change back your jumper pin to Default [Default: [1-2] pins short].

3rd step: Plug in Power cable and turn on the PC power.

4th step: When the PC boot up and show ASUS logo, please press keyboard’s key to login BIOS program setting to setup your BIOS.

*If above action no work, please remove MB’s Li battery and then follow 1st~4th steps to do.

When you finish clear CMOS data, please put back the MB’s battery.
Also according to the manual there's no scenario listed for that LED blinking, so I'm thinking the PSU may be damaged.
__________________
1991 Toyota Celica GTFour RC // 2007 Toyota Rav4 V6 // 2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee
1992 Toyota Celica GT-S ["sold"] \\ 2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee CRD [sold] \\ 2000 Jeep Cherokee [sold] \\ 1997 Honda Prelude [sold] \\ 1992 Jeep YJ [sold/crashed] \\ 1987 Mazda RX-7 [sold] \\ 1987 Toyota Celica GT-S [crushed]
Quote:
Originally Posted by maksimizer View Post
half those dudes are hotter than ,my GF.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RevYouUp View Post
reading this thread is like waiting for goku to charge up a spirit bomb in dragon ball z
Quote:
Originally Posted by Good_KarMa View Post
OH thank god. I thought u had sex with my wife. :cry:
underscore is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 01:26 PM   #9
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
hypothetically, if the problem is a fried MOBO or any other non-PSU component, what are the chances that plugging in a new PSU will damage the PSU?

nvm just tried a new PSU and still wouldnt POST.

the last two possibility is a fried CPU or FRIED MObo.

going to remove my cpu and see if it still boots or not.

time to build a new rig.... bitter sweet sigh...

Last edited by geeknerd; 01-06-2015 at 01:41 PM.
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 01:48 PM   #10
Trollollolloing RS sine 2005
 
TOPEC's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Richmond
Posts: 7,093
Thanked 2,471 Times in 704 Posts
Failed 473 Times in 132 Posts
give it a bit of time and it'll turn on. last time the pwoer went out, my computer was on at that moment. when the power came back, computer would not boot, no amount of clearing cmos and diagnostic worked, figured the power outtage took out some part, left the computer over night and the next morning decided to give it 1 more try, voila it turned on magically. no jokes im serious
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by MajinHurricane View Post
I had some girl come into the busser station the other day trying to make out with every staff member and then pull down her pants and asked for someone to stick a dick in her (at least she shaved).
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1exotic View Post
Vtec doesn't kick in on Reverse.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ulic Qel-Droma View Post
its like.. oh yeah oh yeah.. ohhhh yeah... OOoooOohh... why's it suddenly feel a bit better... ohhhh yeahh... ohhh...oh..fuck... it probably ripped.
TOPEC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 02:10 PM   #11
Where's my RS Christmas Lobster?!
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 892
Thanked 38 Times in 36 Posts
Failed 10 Times in 6 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by geeknerd View Post
hypothetically, if the problem is a fried MOBO or any other non-PSU component, what are the chances that plugging in a new PSU will damage the PSU?

nvm just tried a new PSU and still wouldnt POST.

the last two possibility is a fried CPU or FRIED MObo.

going to remove my cpu and see if it still boots or not.

time to build a new rig.... bitter sweet sigh...
Don't bother trying to remove the CPU to test. The motherboard will never run without a CPU. You will not learn anything from doing this test.

Since you have already tried another power supply, your problem is either the CPU (1% chance) or motherboard (99% chance).
LGA1366 motherboards are very difficult to find, either new or used.
You should consider building a new computer.

Last edited by John; 01-06-2015 at 02:15 PM.
John is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 02:39 PM   #12
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by John View Post
Don't bother trying to remove the CPU to test. The motherboard will never run without a CPU. You will not learn anything from doing this test.

Since you have already tried another power supply, your problem is either the CPU (1% chance) or motherboard (99% chance).
LGA1366 motherboards are very difficult to find, either new or used.
You should consider building a new computer.
just tried it without the cpu and the mobo while it did not POST, the CPU LED and DRAM LED turned red as well as the PSU fan spinning.

(thank you for the advice but it was completely wrong)

WTF? it works so i tried putting the cpu back in and it POST again! wow...

POST beep indicated no ram, put in ram. it boots again.

beep code indicates no video so i put my vid card back in and it boots!!!

was in bios and it suddenly shut down. checked the cpu and was HOT , installed my heatsink again and boot.

it boots to bios and cpu and memory check out ok in bios.

now im about to plug my hdd and fans back in and hope it fuking works



Quote:
Originally Posted by TOPEC View Post
give it a bit of time and it'll turn on. last time the pwoer went out, my computer was on at that moment. when the power came back, computer would not boot, no amount of clearing cmos and diagnostic worked, figured the power outtage took out some part, left the computer over night and the next morning decided to give it 1 more try, voila it turned on magically. no jokes im serious
wow... this was the best advice lol but i hurried the process by plugging everything out and back in. about to plug in my hdd and hope it loads.
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
This post thanked by:
Old 01-06-2015, 02:53 PM   #13
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
wow everything works now. bought a PSU for no reason.

I guess ill keep it as an upgrade evga 750g2 (modular + 100W upgrade) and keep my TX650 as a backup/future build.

thanks for the help everyone.
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 04:39 PM   #14
I keep RS good
 
Ulic Qel-Droma's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Cosmos
Posts: 28,729
Thanked 5,594 Times in 1,522 Posts
Failed 875 Times in 298 Posts
i wonder why that is, if something just needed time to discharge or whatever.
Ulic Qel-Droma is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 05:54 PM   #15
I bringith the lowerballerith
 
geeknerd's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: vancouver
Posts: 1,149
Thanked 457 Times in 190 Posts
Failed 397 Times in 91 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ulic Qel-Droma View Post
i wonder why that is, if something just needed time to discharge or whatever.
i think so too. seeing as how Topec experienced the same thing, im guessing some capacitors needed more than a few power button presses to fully discharge. trying to turn it back on probably didnt help with the discharge process either.
geeknerd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 01-06-2015, 07:56 PM   #16
I contribute to threads in the offtopic forum
 
Bonka's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 2,830
Thanked 755 Times in 318 Posts
Failed 20 Times in 7 Posts
I had this happen to me before. It's a BIOS feature to prevent a sudden power interruption from cooking your components. It will happen again and it will probably take a day or so for it to be bootable again. You need to go into your BIOS and change the setting. It will be under the Power Management Setup something titled AC Power Back Function or similarly and you can select on, off or last state. I turned my on so the computer will power on the moment AC power is available. Haven't had it happen again.
__________________
SHIFT_

"Harvey Belafonte ain't black. He's just a good looking white guy dipped in caramel. " - Archie Bunker
Bonka is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


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



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 03:09 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
SEO by vBSEO ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.
Revscene.net cannot be held accountable for the actions of its members nor does the opinions of the members represent that of Revscene.net