[ale] OT - hardware problem

Joe Knapka jknapka at kneuro.net
Mon Oct 11 16:48:03 EDT 2010


I'm pretty sure it's not the fan, because when I did get the machine
to boot into the BIOS, the BIOS status screen reported fan speeds in
the 3000-4000 RPM range.

I'll definitely look into the capacitor problem, though.  My soldering
skills are only fair, but this might be a good opportunity for a
Learning Experience :-)  I don't know exactly when the board was
manufactured, but it's a BioStar 6100-M9 Socket 939.

Woah.  It's capacitors.  Two of the big 3300uF ones right by the CPU
socket are cracked like eggs.  Gotta find that soldering iron and the
desolder .

-- JK

On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 11:36 AM, Calvin Harrigan
<charriglists at bellsouth.net> wrote:
> Could it be the fan?  It might be spinning, but not sending any feedback
> to the MB and the MB thinks the fan is kaput.  This feature is usually
> only available on higher end boards though.  Most usually depend on
> temperature.  Just an idea.  What year was the board manufactured?
> Could you be suffering from bad capacitors?  Most if not all
> motherboards have a low voltage high current powersupply for the
> CPU,Memory on board, the capacitors there could be at fault.  Look for
> capacitors whose tops seem puffy or have stains, leaks, etc.  Most are
> relatively easy to replace if you have any experience with a soldering iron.
>
>
> On 10/11/2010 1:13 PM, Joe Knapka wrote:
>> I've already replaced the PS with a new-in-box one, with no change in
>> behavior.  So I don't think that's it.
>>
>> It's a socket 939 mobo; those seem to be hard to get these days. Looks
>> like at least mobo and CPU, and probably RAM, will need to be
>> replaced.
>>
>> Bleh.
>>
>> -- JK
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 9:25 AM, Scott Castaline<skotchman at gmail.com>  wrote:
>>>   On 10/11/2010 10:43 AM, Joe Knapka wrote:
>>>> On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 7:38 AM, Jim Kinney<jim.kinney at gmail.com>    wrote:
>>>>> true. easy test for that is to boot to the bios and leave it alone. There's
>>>>> no throttling in the bios for cpu speed AND you can run the temp page and
>>>>> watch for issues there.
>>>>
>>>> I was going to try this, but this morning the machine won't turn on at
>>>> all.  That is, press power button, fans spin up for about 1 second,
>>>> then immediately everything turns off.  Pulled the power switch off
>>>> the mobo and used a screwdriver between the pins to power up, and got
>>>> the same behavior.  Pulled the RAM, same behavior.  Wish I had an
>>>> alternate CPU to test.  Anyway I guess swapping out the mobo is the
>>>> next move.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks all,
>>>>
>>>> -- JK
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>>> If memory serves me correctly, you need a resistive load across the
>>> voltage outputs, otherwise the PSU will behave like that. They do make
>>> test plugs or at least used to for PSUs that provide the load needed to
>>> turn on. If it does the same thing with the plug then it's the PSU. Also
>>> I think that HDDs do provide enough load to trigger the PSU to stay on.
>>> Did you have any hdds, optical drives still plugged in? It's possible
>>> that one of them is dragging down the PSU.
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>>
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>
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