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#1
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DFI Ultra Infinity Losing Its Network Connection.
I have a DFI Ultra Infinity Board with a 2500 XP+ Barton Overclocked to 2.2
GHz (200x11, 1.8 V). The system is prime stable at least for a weekend. However, I notice that it loses its network connection periodically. Rebooting seems to fix the problems. Could this be an issue with the Vdd? Should I try increasing it a bit. Pete |
#2
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There is one other symptom that I forgot to mention. When I restart windoze
XP Pro, it says shutting down network connections and the harddrive light seems to flicker indefinitely. Thanks, Pete "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... I have a DFI Ultra Infinity Board with a 2500 XP+ Barton Overclocked to 2.2 GHz (200x11, 1.8 V). The system is prime stable at least for a weekend. However, I notice that it loses its network connection periodically. Rebooting seems to fix the problems. Could this be an issue with the Vdd? Should I try increasing it a bit. Pete |
#3
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"Peter Harrington" wrote in message
... I have a DFI Ultra Infinity Board with a 2500 XP+ Barton Overclocked to 2.2 GHz (200x11, 1.8 V). The system is prime stable at least for a weekend. However, I notice that it loses its network connection periodically. Rebooting seems to fix the problems. Could this be an issue with the Vdd? Should I try increasing it a bit. I have one of these boards and a similar CPU. Whilst it has some "quirks", the network connections have been completely rock solid. And I haven't seen many (any?) ethernet problems for this board reported on the various forums either. I guess there's lots of things you *could* try - like updating the bios, larger heatsink on the Southbridge, update the nVidia drivers, mess with voltages etc. But I have no reason to believe any of this will specifically fix your problem. What's the ethernet port plugged into? A router, maybe? Are you sure that component is not playing up? Regarding the constant "ticking" of the hard disk led (if that's what you mean), that's completely normal. Its something in Windows XP that does it, not sure what exactly. Chip |
#4
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Thanks Chip. I have two systems on the same router, so I only have this
problem with this one computer, but I could try switching cables. I ran Prime95 overnight just to make sure and it ran fine. As for drivers. The latest NF2 driver set is 2.45 at the DFI download page, but I could not find a way to find the version number of the ones installed. I can version numbers for each device, but they do not correspond to the install pack at the DFI site. Also, the latest DFI BIOS is only for the Sempron or does it have over modifications for smoother behavior? BTW, I am on the 6/19/04 BIOS and I could not get this system to run stable at 2.2 GHz until, I updated. Thanks, Pete "Chip" wrote in message ... "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... I have a DFI Ultra Infinity Board with a 2500 XP+ Barton Overclocked to 2.2 GHz (200x11, 1.8 V). The system is prime stable at least for a weekend. However, I notice that it loses its network connection periodically. Rebooting seems to fix the problems. Could this be an issue with the Vdd? Should I try increasing it a bit. I have one of these boards and a similar CPU. Whilst it has some "quirks", the network connections have been completely rock solid. And I haven't seen many (any?) ethernet problems for this board reported on the various forums either. I guess there's lots of things you *could* try - like updating the bios, larger heatsink on the Southbridge, update the nVidia drivers, mess with voltages etc. But I have no reason to believe any of this will specifically fix your problem. What's the ethernet port plugged into? A router, maybe? Are you sure that component is not playing up? Regarding the constant "ticking" of the hard disk led (if that's what you mean), that's completely normal. Its something in Windows XP that does it, not sure what exactly. Chip |
#5
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"Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... Thanks Chip. I have two systems on the same router, so I only have this problem with this one computer, but I could try switching cables. I would certainly do that. I ran Prime95 overnight just to make sure and it ran fine. As for drivers. The latest NF2 driver set is 2.45 at the DFI download page, but I could not find a way to find the version number of the ones installed. I can version numbers for each device, but they do not correspond to the install pack at the DFI site. The latese nVidia drivers are 4.27. 2.45's are probably 1 year old now, so I would certainly update those. There were quite a few problems with earlier nVidia drivers too (like I had my USB ports disappearing on me with version 2.xx), so this is certainly a possible suspect for your problem. Also, the latest DFI BIOS is only for the Sempron or does it have over modifications for smoother behavior? I don't think so. You should be OK with 6/19/04. And apart from anything else, a bios update should be considered a measure of last resort (unless you have Bios Saviour). Corrupted bioses are *way* too common on these boards to go fiddling about with the bios unless you really have to. BTW, I am on the 6/19/04 BIOS and I could not get this system to run stable at 2.2 GHz until, I updated. Thanks, Pete Cheers. Chip "Chip" wrote in message ... "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... I have a DFI Ultra Infinity Board with a 2500 XP+ Barton Overclocked to 2.2 GHz (200x11, 1.8 V). The system is prime stable at least for a weekend. However, I notice that it loses its network connection periodically. Rebooting seems to fix the problems. Could this be an issue with the Vdd? Should I try increasing it a bit. I have one of these boards and a similar CPU. Whilst it has some "quirks", the network connections have been completely rock solid. And I haven't seen many (any?) ethernet problems for this board reported on the various forums either. I guess there's lots of things you *could* try - like updating the bios, larger heatsink on the Southbridge, update the nVidia drivers, mess with voltages etc. But I have no reason to believe any of this will specifically fix your problem. What's the ethernet port plugged into? A router, maybe? Are you sure that component is not playing up? Regarding the constant "ticking" of the hard disk led (if that's what you mean), that's completely normal. Its something in Windows XP that does it, not sure what exactly. Chip |
#6
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"Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... There is one other symptom that I forgot to mention. When I restart windoze XP Pro, it says shutting down network connections and the harddrive light seems to flicker indefinitely. I don't know if this will help but it's worth a try ... (taken from MS site) You can use Device Manager to change the power management settings for a network adapter. To disable this setting in Device Manager, expand Network Adapters, right-click the adapter, click Properties, click the Power Management tab, and then clear the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" check box. |
#7
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Hi Tim:
Thanks, the checkbox was clicked and I have a good feeling that this tip (fingers crossed) will solve the problem. Pete "Tim" wrote in message ... "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... There is one other symptom that I forgot to mention. When I restart windoze XP Pro, it says shutting down network connections and the harddrive light seems to flicker indefinitely. I don't know if this will help but it's worth a try ... (taken from MS site) You can use Device Manager to change the power management settings for a network adapter. To disable this setting in Device Manager, expand Network Adapters, right-click the adapter, click Properties, click the Power Management tab, and then clear the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" check box. |
#8
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Thanks, Chip!!!
I kind of thought that I ought to check out the Nvidia site. I will have to send the tech guys a not at DFI about updating their web site. I guess RadarSync and Windoze Update are WPoS when it comes to updating drivers. I hope this too (updating the NF2 drivers) will solve the problem and improve the stability of my system. Pete "Chip" wrote in message ... "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... Thanks Chip. I have two systems on the same router, so I only have this problem with this one computer, but I could try switching cables. I would certainly do that. I ran Prime95 overnight just to make sure and it ran fine. As for drivers. The latest NF2 driver set is 2.45 at the DFI download page, but I could not find a way to find the version number of the ones installed. I can version numbers for each device, but they do not correspond to the install pack at the DFI site. The latese nVidia drivers are 4.27. 2.45's are probably 1 year old now, so I would certainly update those. There were quite a few problems with earlier nVidia drivers too (like I had my USB ports disappearing on me with version 2.xx), so this is certainly a possible suspect for your problem. Also, the latest DFI BIOS is only for the Sempron or does it have over modifications for smoother behavior? I don't think so. You should be OK with 6/19/04. And apart from anything else, a bios update should be considered a measure of last resort (unless you have Bios Saviour). Corrupted bioses are *way* too common on these boards to go fiddling about with the bios unless you really have to. BTW, I am on the 6/19/04 BIOS and I could not get this system to run stable at 2.2 GHz until, I updated. Thanks, Pete Cheers. Chip "Chip" wrote in message ... "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... I have a DFI Ultra Infinity Board with a 2500 XP+ Barton Overclocked to 2.2 GHz (200x11, 1.8 V). The system is prime stable at least for a weekend. However, I notice that it loses its network connection periodically. Rebooting seems to fix the problems. Could this be an issue with the Vdd? Should I try increasing it a bit. I have one of these boards and a similar CPU. Whilst it has some "quirks", the network connections have been completely rock solid. And I haven't seen many (any?) ethernet problems for this board reported on the various forums either. I guess there's lots of things you *could* try - like updating the bios, larger heatsink on the Southbridge, update the nVidia drivers, mess with voltages etc. But I have no reason to believe any of this will specifically fix your problem. What's the ethernet port plugged into? A router, maybe? Are you sure that component is not playing up? Regarding the constant "ticking" of the hard disk led (if that's what you mean), that's completely normal. Its something in Windows XP that does it, not sure what exactly. Chip |
#9
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"Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... Hi Tim: Thanks, the checkbox was clicked and I have a good feeling that this tip (fingers crossed) will solve the problem. I don't mean to dash your hopes, but this checkbox is ticked by default and it doesn't normally cause anyone a problem, so I very much doubt this is what's troubling you. Apart from anything else, this check box only affects what XP does to the network connection **when XP is going into suspend mode, or hibernating**. It would not explain why your network connection was being dropped in normal use. Chip Pete "Tim" wrote in message ... "Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... There is one other symptom that I forgot to mention. When I restart windoze XP Pro, it says shutting down network connections and the harddrive light seems to flicker indefinitely. I don't know if this will help but it's worth a try ... (taken from MS site) You can use Device Manager to change the power management settings for a network adapter. To disable this setting in Device Manager, expand Network Adapters, right-click the adapter, click Properties, click the Power Management tab, and then clear the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" check box. |
#10
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"Peter Harrington" wrote in message ... Hi Tim: Thanks, the checkbox was clicked and I have a good feeling that this tip (fingers crossed) will solve the problem. Pete Just yesterday I starting having a problem with "disconnected network" prompts from XP Pro. I fixed it (fingers crossed) by changing my Ethernet speed value from "Auto-detect" to its manual setting. Might be worth trying .... Step 1 Go to Start Control Panel and select Network connections. Step 2 Right click on your network card (for 2000 and XP only)and select Properties. Step 3 Select the Configure button. Step 4 Under the Advanced tab you will see two boxes; Property and Value. Note: Depending on the type of Ethernet card you are using the headings in the Property box will be slightly different. Step 5 Select each heading in the Properties box until the Value box displays the speed of your Ethernet card (it will look like this: Auto-Detect, 10Mb Full, 100 MB Half, etc..). Set it for the speed appropriate for your hardware. I set mine for10mb Full Duplex (I'm using the built-in gigabit LAN of my Intel mobo with a D-Link 604 router, which connects to a Motorola CableModem). Step 6 Keep clicking OK until you get to the desktop. Your computer may ask you to reboot depending on the version of Windows you are running. |
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