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Motherboard/PC not booting when no monitor connected ?!? (orswitch connections ?)
Skybuck Flying wrote:
"Paul" wrote in message ... Skybuck Flying wrote: Good idea, I booted the pc into the bios, and there is an option called: Boot Failure Guard [enabled] Boot Failure Guard Count [3] So this looks suspicious and might be the reason why it didn’t boot without a monitor attached. Bye, Skybuck. " Boot Failure Guard is there to help people who overclock. My previous Asrock board had that option. If you press the reset button, three times in a row, with a two second delay between presses, it tells the computer that some setting is preventing a normal boot. Such an option saves the user from having to "Clear CMOS" to regain control of the computer. It is a handy feature. " So does this only work for the "reset switch"... Because I also did "control-alt-delete" a few times because the "press F2 or del to enter bios" message either didn't work for F2 or it went to fast to press del Bye, Skybuck. The reset signal works well, because it is an abrupt condition the BIOS is not expecting. And it is easier to interpret as a crash condition. Crashes seem to be tracked, by a flag the BIOS sets. The flag is cleared, if some kind of "normal" shutdown is done. By using the reset button, you're simulating an abrupt termination, just like a real crash would achieve. I've never seen a technical description of the details of crash detection (like, where the flag value is stored). Asus uses a similar technique to Asrock, the difference being that Asus triggers after just one occurrence. And the Asus recovery procedure is triggered even when users aren't overclocking. The Asrock technique of waiting for three events in a row (implying extreme instability), is better, because it avoids nuisance BIOS changes. On my P4C800-E Deluxe from Asus, I've had to reload the BIOS settings a few times, doe to triggering that thing. Some BIOS designs now, are a bit more clever, as all they reset is the memory clock rate and the FSB clock rate. And they leave the other settings alone, so there is not as much BIOS settings to reload. Some motherboards have "profile storage", and with those, you can reload the BIOS settings from storage. But the motherboards I've got, if they recover from a crash in that way, I have to reload all the settings manually. Paul |
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