Its obvious but felt like asking :)

Soldato
Joined
29 Mar 2007
Posts
5,762
im pretty sure its obvious the motherboard is knackered, basically

Woke up, Switched computer on AND.....No boot up...and no bleep from the motherboard....No signal on screen...No bios....NOTHING...Just lights and fans :)... Motherboard knackered ?

if it is the motherboard i had is a OLD Asrock DDR400 one.... 939 socket i think (AMD Athlon X2)... whats the cheapest DDR400 939 socket motherboard ? (Thats if it definatly is the motherboard, but as i say im pretty sur eit is)

cheers
 
ASRock still probably make the cheapest socket 939 motherboards but have a look in the B Grade and Clearance sections of OcUK in case there are some deals since you will have all the necessary cabling already.
 
gah !im confused now, i may be acting like a noob but what is different about Amd2 and Amd 939 dual core......i have the 4200+ dual core...does that mean it will only fit 939 socket ? if someone came upto me and said do you have a AMD2 i would automatically think he ment Amd dual core..... :/
 
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AM2 is a differennt *socket* to 939, that's all. The 4200+ eventually came out in both 939 and AM2 pin-outs. The "2" in AM2 has nothing to do with dual-core. (We're awaiting AM2+ and AM3 presently.)
 
It should yes. Older boards might need a BIOS update to recognize the dual-core model, but other than that you should have no problems. Nevertheless, if you've found a board to buy, it's prudent to check the manufacturer's website for the board's specs.
 
im pretty sure its obvious the motherboard is knackered, basically

Woke up, Switched computer on AND.....No boot up...and no bleep from the motherboard....No signal on screen...No bios....NOTHING...Just lights and fans :)... Motherboard knackered ?

Try clearing the CMOS
 
It should yes. Older boards might need a BIOS update to recognize the dual-core model, but other than that you should have no problems. Nevertheless, if you've found a board to buy, it's prudent to check the manufacturer's website for the board's specs.

ah great so i just need a s939 which would fit 8800s and ddr400...thanks ;)
 
Could be the PSU. If you haven't got a tester then remove the main connector from the board and shunt the green with any black (use a paperclip or whatever) and connect up an old hard drive to put a load on it to test it. Trying another PSU with your board to see if it POSTS would 100% confirm the fault. Double check all connections first though :)
 
yerp i just got another psu and tried it and does exactly the same, so its the motherboard, when do i get access to Market thread....250 posts is it ?
 
Have you not tried clearing the CMOS as i said? I would do that and while you're in there re-seat the memory aswell. It's easy to get your BIOS in a non-bootable configuration just like to described and clearing the CMOS would quickly resolve this.
 
how do you clear the CMOS ?

there will usually be a jumper near to the battery or near to the first pci slot. It will have 3 pins, the jumper being on 2 of them. swap the jumper onto the other 2 pins, wait a minute (might aswell re-seat the memory while you're waiting) and then swap the jumper back. Theres only 2 ways you can put the jumper on. When you switch the computer on everything in the BIOS will be re-set and you will probably have to set time time/date etc.
 
there will usually be a jumper near to the battery or near to the first pci slot. It will have 3 pins, the jumper being on 2 of them. swap the jumper onto the other 2 pins, wait a minute (might aswell re-seat the memory while you're waiting) and then swap the jumper back. Theres only 2 ways you can put the jumper on. When you switch the computer on everything in the BIOS will be re-set and you will probably have to set time time/date etc.

i couldnt find one next to the battery but there was 3 pins with a jumper next to my psu, which is on totally the oposite side to the battery.... :/
 
Nope this one that they dont even sell anymore !
939nf4g-sata2.jpg
 
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