Maybe someone can explain the following to me.
Went to start my computer this morning, nothing, just a flashing cursor. Tried to start it several times and each time the same thing. In the end I tried "DEL" to enter the BIOS. That worked, but all seemed normal. Tried to boot again and just got a blank screen and a flashing cursor. No hard drive run up, no DVD drive light, nothing.
Swore a lot and came to the conclusion that it had passed to the great computer land fill in the sky. Went to town and started to price things up. Found a nice Duel Core for reasonable money, but still did not really want to part with a single Euro. Then it occurred to me that the date in the BIOS was Jan 2003, as if it had defaulted back to build day. Why? well out of nothing to loose I replaced the CMOS battery. I checked, it was down to 1 volt and it is normally 3 volts. Well turned the computer on and all was well.
So my question is, why should a flat CMOS battery cause such a "failure", if the battery was/is flat, why would it not just boot to it's most basic setting?
Matt
Thanks Nick
Short and simple
Matt
......Found a nice Duel Core for reasonable money.......
Matt
...Dual, Matt.....DUAL!
Duel is what the Three Musketeers got up to during their various exciting adventures.....>>>
http://www.amazon.ca/Three-Musketeers-F ... B00000INU8
Paul...with a dual personality......!
The first thing people do when something is wrong is RMA.
When I built my system it wouldn't boot, and it turned out that I didn't push the power cables into the board all the way. Also, my floppy drive didn't work, and it was because I put in the FDD cable the wrong way.
I think I would check the connections before RMAing. And the only way to be absolutely sure something is dead is to test for beep codes.
Cheers
Cameron
Come to think about it, my computer did make a beeping sequence, but hey, who still has the single piece of A4 that accompanied the computer under the guise "instructions", not me
Also, what is RMA-ing?
Matt
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It's when you send something back as a defect. Most companies require an RMA before they will process the return and give you a new one.
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