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-   -   Trouble booting now totally out of service (http://www.hardwarebanter.com/showthread.php?t=99660)

Robert Heiling June 12th 05 09:21 PM

Trouble booting now totally out of service
 

System placed in service Jan 2001:
PC-Chips M805LR motherboard with VIA KT133 chipset, Athlon 1GHz cpu,
512MB SDRAM, AGP video It has run with a number of HD's & OS's over the
years including Linux, Win98 & Win2K, & with LILO and NT-loader.

I've always kept the boot sequence at Floppy--CD--HD and the boot
*hangups* started occasionally about maybe about 2? years ago and would
often come after a "Boot from A.T.A.P.I. CD" if I had left a data CD in
the drive. Other times I have gotten the "LI" failure indication and a
Grub error on a couple of occasions although I've never installed Grub.
Pressing reset alone always caused a re-boot which was almost always
successful.

Over the past several months as it was getting worse, it's been running
a 30GB HD with vanilla Win98 on it. [Note: That HD is running fine in
this machine now where I boot to it optionally from the Bios boot
menu]. Boot failure always occurred! [whether I had a bootable floppy
or CD in or not] and occurred at the point where POST had displayed a
screenfull of all the h/w configuration. Pressing reset would repeat the
process and it would take more & more repeats as the days went by before
the boot went on & completed. More recently, it would give a
semi-trashed screen as the last one before success and I started
sometimes needing to use the front power-off button as reset had no
effect at that point. Anyhow, it all was looking very much as though
something was needing to warm up. Once up, it would run all day without
problem!!

During the above running period, I had reseated everything includung IDE
cables, swapped out memory, AGP video card plus installed a new CMOS
battery. Nothing helped with the boot hangs.

Then one morning after running all day previously, it went the rest of
the way. Press front power-on and no signal to monitor as it has only
yellow led on. Both PS fan and cpu fan are running as is green power-on
led on case front. Reset has no obvious effect although a flicker in an
led may be quicker than I can detect. Case front power button needs to
be held in to shut systen down.

Do I have toast? or is it something simple that I've overlooked?

Bob


kony June 12th 05 09:59 PM

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 13:21:39 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:


System placed in service Jan 2001:
PC-Chips M805LR motherboard with VIA KT133 chipset, Athlon 1GHz cpu,
512MB SDRAM, AGP video It has run with a number of HD's & OS's over the
years including Linux, Win98 & Win2K, & with LILO and NT-loader.

I've always kept the boot sequence at Floppy--CD--HD and the boot
*hangups* started occasionally about maybe about 2? years ago and would
often come after a "Boot from A.T.A.P.I. CD" if I had left a data CD in
the drive. Other times I have gotten the "LI" failure indication and a
Grub error on a couple of occasions although I've never installed Grub.
Pressing reset alone always caused a re-boot which was almost always
successful.

Over the past several months as it was getting worse, it's been running
a 30GB HD with vanilla Win98 on it. [Note: That HD is running fine in
this machine now where I boot to it optionally from the Bios boot
menu]. Boot failure always occurred! [whether I had a bootable floppy
or CD in or not] and occurred at the point where POST had displayed a
screenfull of all the h/w configuration. Pressing reset would repeat the
process and it would take more & more repeats as the days went by before
the boot went on & completed. More recently, it would give a
semi-trashed screen as the last one before success and I started
sometimes needing to use the front power-off button as reset had no
effect at that point. Anyhow, it all was looking very much as though
something was needing to warm up. Once up, it would run all day without
problem!!


Check cables, connectors, card contacts, fans, voltages, and
examine the motherboard capacitors for venting.




During the above running period, I had reseated everything includung IDE
cables, swapped out memory, AGP video card plus installed a new CMOS
battery. Nothing helped with the boot hangs.



Disconnct all but the essential drive to boot from.

Try leaving only the floppy connected and run Memtest86 on
it for a few hours.



Then one morning after running all day previously, it went the rest of
the way. Press front power-on and no signal to monitor as it has only
yellow led on. Both PS fan and cpu fan are running as is green power-on
led on case front. Reset has no obvious effect although a flicker in an
led may be quicker than I can detect. Case front power button needs to
be held in to shut systen down.

Do I have toast? or is it something simple that I've overlooked?



Try clearing CMOS. Check the battery voltage.
If the system power supply is similarly low-quality as the
motherboard, you've gotten good value out of both at this
point in time- and now both should be replaced (if none of
the above makes any difference).

Robert Heiling June 13th 05 12:07 AM

kony wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 13:21:39 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:

System placed in service Jan 2001:
PC-Chips M805LR motherboard with VIA KT133 chipset, Athlon 1GHz cpu,
512MB SDRAM, AGP video It has run with a number of HD's & OS's over the
years including Linux, Win98 & Win2K, & with LILO and NT-loader.

I've always kept the boot sequence at Floppy--CD--HD and the boot
*hangups* started occasionally about maybe about 2? years ago and would
often come after a "Boot from A.T.A.P.I. CD" if I had left a data CD in
the drive. Other times I have gotten the "LI" failure indication and a
Grub error on a couple of occasions although I've never installed Grub.
Pressing reset alone always caused a re-boot which was almost always
successful.

Over the past several months as it was getting worse, it's been running
a 30GB HD with vanilla Win98 on it. [Note: That HD is running fine in
this machine now where I boot to it optionally from the Bios boot
menu]. Boot failure always occurred! [whether I had a bootable floppy
or CD in or not] and occurred at the point where POST had displayed a
screenfull of all the h/w configuration. Pressing reset would repeat the
process and it would take more & more repeats as the days went by before
the boot went on & completed. More recently, it would give a
semi-trashed screen as the last one before success and I started
sometimes needing to use the front power-off button as reset had no
effect at that point. Anyhow, it all was looking very much as though
something was needing to warm up. Once up, it would run all day without
problem!!


Check cables, connectors, card contacts, fans, voltages, and
examine the motherboard capacitors for venting.


Reseating done over & over again already as mentioned. Both PS & cpu fan
still run. Voltages were still in spec when I was last able to get into the
Bios to look at them. Inside of case, MB, PS, & CPU always kept as dustfree
as possble on a regular basis.

During the above running period, I had reseated everything includung IDE
cables, swapped out memory, AGP video card plus installed a new CMOS
battery. Nothing helped with the boot hangs.


Disconnct all but the essential drive to boot from.


Sorry. I maybe should have included it, but I had to stop somewhere and I've
already done that along with the things mentioned above. I've basically done
most of the fault-isolation tricks of that nature. It's that "warmup" that
had me stumped and I keep wondering if the heat didn't close some hairline
crack somewhere or have a similar effect.

Try leaving only the floppy connected and run Memtest86 on
it for a few hours.


Hard to do when it won't even boot. :-)

Then one morning after running all day previously, it went the rest of
the way. Press front power-on and no signal to monitor as it has only
yellow led on. Both PS fan and cpu fan are running as is green power-on
led on case front. Reset has no obvious effect although a flicker in an
led may be quicker than I can detect. Case front power button needs to
be held in to shut systen down.

Do I have toast? or is it something simple that I've overlooked?


Try clearing CMOS. Check the battery voltage.


Just tried that again, but no go.

If the system power supply is similarly low-quality as the
motherboard, you've gotten good value out of both at this
point in time- and now both should be replaced (if none of
the above makes any difference).


Thanks, but I'll do that once I find out what's wrong with it. I was hoping
that the pattern of its failure would be familiar to someone here.

Thanks for trying

Bob


Pen June 13th 05 01:00 AM

At this point simple problems seem out. The boot
problems suggested mobo and/or memory troubles.
If you have swapped out all the parts, then the mobo or CPU are
all that is left.

"Robert Heiling" wrote in message
...
kony wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 13:21:39 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:

System placed in service Jan 2001:
PC-Chips M805LR motherboard with VIA KT133 chipset, Athlon 1GHz cpu,
512MB SDRAM, AGP video It has run with a number of HD's & OS's over
the
years including Linux, Win98 & Win2K, & with LILO and NT-loader.

I've always kept the boot sequence at Floppy--CD--HD and the boot
*hangups* started occasionally about maybe about 2? years ago and
would
often come after a "Boot from A.T.A.P.I. CD" if I had left a data CD
in
the drive. Other times I have gotten the "LI" failure indication and
a
Grub error on a couple of occasions although I've never installed
Grub.
Pressing reset alone always caused a re-boot which was almost always
successful.

Over the past several months as it was getting worse, it's been
running
a 30GB HD with vanilla Win98 on it. [Note: That HD is running fine
in
this machine now where I boot to it optionally from the Bios boot
menu]. Boot failure always occurred! [whether I had a bootable
floppy
or CD in or not] and occurred at the point where POST had displayed
a
screenfull of all the h/w configuration. Pressing reset would repeat
the
process and it would take more & more repeats as the days went by
before
the boot went on & completed. More recently, it would give a
semi-trashed screen as the last one before success and I started
sometimes needing to use the front power-off button as reset had no
effect at that point. Anyhow, it all was looking very much as though
something was needing to warm up. Once up, it would run all day
without
problem!!


Check cables, connectors, card contacts, fans, voltages, and
examine the motherboard capacitors for venting.


Reseating done over & over again already as mentioned. Both PS & cpu
fan
still run. Voltages were still in spec when I was last able to get
into the
Bios to look at them. Inside of case, MB, PS, & CPU always kept as
dustfree
as possble on a regular basis.

During the above running period, I had reseated everything includung
IDE
cables, swapped out memory, AGP video card plus installed a new CMOS
battery. Nothing helped with the boot hangs.


Disconnct all but the essential drive to boot from.


Sorry. I maybe should have included it, but I had to stop somewhere
and I've
already done that along with the things mentioned above. I've
basically done
most of the fault-isolation tricks of that nature. It's that "warmup"
that
had me stumped and I keep wondering if the heat didn't close some
hairline
crack somewhere or have a similar effect.

Try leaving only the floppy connected and run Memtest86 on
it for a few hours.


Hard to do when it won't even boot. :-)

Then one morning after running all day previously, it went the rest
of
the way. Press front power-on and no signal to monitor as it has
only
yellow led on. Both PS fan and cpu fan are running as is green
power-on
led on case front. Reset has no obvious effect although a flicker in
an
led may be quicker than I can detect. Case front power button needs
to
be held in to shut systen down.

Do I have toast? or is it something simple that I've overlooked?


Try clearing CMOS. Check the battery voltage.


Just tried that again, but no go.

If the system power supply is similarly low-quality as the
motherboard, you've gotten good value out of both at this
point in time- and now both should be replaced (if none of
the above makes any difference).


Thanks, but I'll do that once I find out what's wrong with it. I was
hoping
that the pattern of its failure would be familiar to someone here.

Thanks for trying

Bob



kony June 13th 05 01:16 AM

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 16:07:54 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:


Thanks, but I'll do that once I find out what's wrong with it. I was hoping
that the pattern of its failure would be familiar to someone here.


The pattern falls under the all-encompasing "something is
gradually getting less stable", up until the point where the
function had degraded enough to completely prevent
operation.

That can be caused by many parts but most commonly
motherboard or power supply. The last attemp could be
pulling out the board and power, plus CPU, 1 memory module
and video, and trying this barebones combination alone on a
desktop. Then swap in a different power supply or
motherboard if possible.

Robert Heiling June 13th 05 01:21 AM


But doesn't anybody here know *why* I could always get into the Bios on the
cold system, but a boot would not complete until the system had been on for
5-10 minutes? i.e. warmed up?? I'm willing to believe that whatever it was
that was gradually failing and getting worse & worse with time, finally went
out. What might it have been?

Pen wrote:

At this point simple problems seem out. The boot
problems suggested mobo and/or memory troubles.
If you have swapped out all the parts, then the mobo or CPU are
all that is left.

"Robert Heiling" wrote in message
...
kony wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 13:21:39 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:

System placed in service Jan 2001:
PC-Chips M805LR motherboard with VIA KT133 chipset, Athlon 1GHz cpu,
512MB SDRAM, AGP video It has run with a number of HD's & OS's over
the
years including Linux, Win98 & Win2K, & with LILO and NT-loader.

I've always kept the boot sequence at Floppy--CD--HD and the boot
*hangups* started occasionally about maybe about 2? years ago and
would
often come after a "Boot from A.T.A.P.I. CD" if I had left a data CD
in
the drive. Other times I have gotten the "LI" failure indication and
a
Grub error on a couple of occasions although I've never installed
Grub.
Pressing reset alone always caused a re-boot which was almost always
successful.

Over the past several months as it was getting worse, it's been
running
a 30GB HD with vanilla Win98 on it. [Note: That HD is running fine
in
this machine now where I boot to it optionally from the Bios boot
menu]. Boot failure always occurred! [whether I had a bootable
floppy
or CD in or not] and occurred at the point where POST had displayed
a
screenfull of all the h/w configuration. Pressing reset would repeat
the
process and it would take more & more repeats as the days went by
before
the boot went on & completed. More recently, it would give a
semi-trashed screen as the last one before success and I started
sometimes needing to use the front power-off button as reset had no
effect at that point. Anyhow, it all was looking very much as though
something was needing to warm up. Once up, it would run all day
without
problem!!

Check cables, connectors, card contacts, fans, voltages, and
examine the motherboard capacitors for venting.


Reseating done over & over again already as mentioned. Both PS & cpu
fan
still run. Voltages were still in spec when I was last able to get
into the
Bios to look at them. Inside of case, MB, PS, & CPU always kept as
dustfree
as possble on a regular basis.

During the above running period, I had reseated everything includung
IDE
cables, swapped out memory, AGP video card plus installed a new CMOS
battery. Nothing helped with the boot hangs.

Disconnct all but the essential drive to boot from.


Sorry. I maybe should have included it, but I had to stop somewhere
and I've
already done that along with the things mentioned above. I've
basically done
most of the fault-isolation tricks of that nature. It's that "warmup"
that
had me stumped and I keep wondering if the heat didn't close some
hairline
crack somewhere or have a similar effect.

Try leaving only the floppy connected and run Memtest86 on
it for a few hours.


Hard to do when it won't even boot. :-)

Then one morning after running all day previously, it went the rest
of
the way. Press front power-on and no signal to monitor as it has
only
yellow led on. Both PS fan and cpu fan are running as is green
power-on
led on case front. Reset has no obvious effect although a flicker in
an
led may be quicker than I can detect. Case front power button needs
to
be held in to shut systen down.

Do I have toast? or is it something simple that I've overlooked?

Try clearing CMOS. Check the battery voltage.


Just tried that again, but no go.

If the system power supply is similarly low-quality as the
motherboard, you've gotten good value out of both at this
point in time- and now both should be replaced (if none of
the above makes any difference).


Thanks, but I'll do that once I find out what's wrong with it. I was
hoping
that the pattern of its failure would be familiar to someone here.

Thanks for trying

Bob



kony June 13th 05 01:30 AM

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 17:21:28 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:


But doesn't anybody here know *why* I could always get into the Bios on the
cold system, but a boot would not complete until the system had been on for
5-10 minutes? i.e. warmed up?? I'm willing to believe that whatever it was
that was gradually failing and getting worse & worse with time, finally went
out. What might it have been?


Typically it could be power or motherboard capacitors, poor
solder joints (further degrading with numerous slight
thermal cycling) or board cracks.

Robert Heiling June 13th 05 01:43 AM

kony wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 16:07:54 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:

Thanks, but I'll do that once I find out what's wrong with it. I was hoping
that the pattern of its failure would be familiar to someone here.


The pattern falls under the all-encompasing "something is
gradually getting less stable", up until the point where the
function had degraded enough to completely prevent
operation.


But I was smart enough to figure that part out all by myself. :-) I was hoping
that the gurus would have a better answer.

That can be caused by many parts but most commonly
motherboard or power supply.


I had been secretly hoping that everything would point to the power supply
because I would pop the $$ for one if I could be reasonably certain. But a spare
unused power supply sitting on the shelf out in my garage because that wasn't
the problem isn't my idea of how to spend my money. Aren't there some voltage
test points that I could check now? The drawer on the CD drive must locked or
something as it won't open when I press the button. [yes the power is connected]

The last attemp could be
pulling out the board and power, plus CPU, 1 memory module
and video, and trying this barebones combination alone on a
desktop. Then swap in a different power supply or
motherboard if possible.


I don't have all those spare parts sitting around even though I'm a packrat. I'd
have to buy them. Right now I have this PC-133 memory that I can't use anywhere
else, a Radeon that can be used, etc. It's a slow system by modern standards,
but my wife was happy with it, so I'd like to get it running again if it's not
too complicated.

Bob




Robert Heiling June 13th 05 01:58 AM

kony wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 17:21:28 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:


But doesn't anybody here know *why* I could always get into the Bios on the
cold system, but a boot would not complete until the system had been on for
5-10 minutes? i.e. warmed up?? I'm willing to believe that whatever it was
that was gradually failing and getting worse & worse with time, finally went
out. What might it have been?


Typically it could be power or motherboard capacitors, poor
solder joints (further degrading with numerous slight
thermal cycling) or board cracks.


That makes a lot of sense! I believe the cracked solder would behave just like
the symptoms. Since the problem involved trashed video as it was building up and
it is video that is now dead, it might be a solder joint in video related
circuitry. Any ideas on that? like near the AGP slot? Although it's unlikely to
be visible to the naked eye. It may also be important to note that it may have
been attempting to switch from text video to graphics video at the time of
failure, although the video cards I tried were not failing.

Bob



kony June 13th 05 05:10 AM

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 17:58:02 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:

kony wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jun 2005 17:21:28 -0700, Robert Heiling
wrote:


But doesn't anybody here know *why* I could always get into the Bios on the
cold system, but a boot would not complete until the system had been on for
5-10 minutes? i.e. warmed up?? I'm willing to believe that whatever it was
that was gradually failing and getting worse & worse with time, finally went
out. What might it have been?


Typically it could be power or motherboard capacitors, poor
solder joints (further degrading with numerous slight
thermal cycling) or board cracks.


That makes a lot of sense! I believe the cracked solder would behave just like
the symptoms. Since the problem involved trashed video as it was building up and
it is video that is now dead, it might be a solder joint in video related
circuitry. Any ideas on that?


Video won't appear if any other part of the system doesn't
work, it would be the typical failure-to-post problem. It
"could" be video related, but insufficient information to
know- and we may never know, a modern board is too complex
and small to easily test, and often not worth the time even
if one could test it.


like near the AGP slot?


I'd suspect that region to be less likely than many- because
the soldered-on slots greatly reinforce the board to prevent
bending. Cold solder joints could be anywhere though, no
easy way to see under a ball-grid chip.

Although it's unlikely to
be visible to the naked eye. It may also be important to note that it may have
been attempting to switch from text video to graphics video at the time of
failure, although the video cards I tried were not failing.



That may not mean anything, switching to graphics may've
simply been a significant increase in power usage. If you
had a spare PCI video card lying around you could try it,
but I won't hold a lot of hope for it working unless the
power supply itself was just barely limping along and the
PCI card used significantly less power than the former video
did.



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