Archief - nieuwe pc prob

Het archief is een bevroren moment uit een vorige versie van dit forum, met andere regels en andere bazen. Deze posts weerspiegelen op geen enkele manier onze huidige ideeën, waarden of wereldbeelden en zijn op sommige plaatsen gecensureerd wegens ontoelaatbaar. Veel zijn in een andere tijdsgeest gemaakt, al dan niet ironisch - zoals in het ironische subforum Off-Topic - en zouden op dit moment niet meer gepost (mogen) worden. Toch bieden we dit archief nog graag aan als informatiedatabank en naslagwerk. Lees er hier meer over of start een gesprek met anderen.

xReAVeRx

Legacy Member
kheb dus heel me pc in elkaar gestoken, maar als ik em opstart hoor ik heel de tijd een gebiep. wtf??

Kriz

Legacy Member
xReAVeRx zei:
kheb dus heel me pc in elkaar gestoken, maar als ik em opstart hoor ik heel de tijd een gebiep. wtf??

Geef eens wat details :) :ironic:

Vertel wat hardware je hebt gebruikt enz;
+ waarschijnlijk is dat gebiep in een bepaald 'ritme' :); naargelang dat gebiep kan je normaal in het boekje van je moederbord zien wat er fout is.

xReAVeRx

Legacy Member
Abit KV8 Pro AMD Socket 754 Athlon 64 + radeon 9800 pro + Apacer DDR 512 MB (266 Mhz) PC2100.

da gebiep is zo : tuuuuut.....tuuuuut......tuuuuuut........tuuuuuuut

kvind der niks over terug in me manual.

NoochBoY

Legacy Member
Gevonden op een forum: http://217.19.24.13/evil/Forums/index.php?showtopic=12

Award bios codes

1 Long Beep: Memory problem or Power problem

Explanation: There is a failure of some sort related to the system memory.Or your PSU aint supplying the power

Diagnosis: The first bank of memory probably has a failure of some sort; this is usually just a physical problem such as an incorrectly inserted module, but may also mean a bad memory chip in a module. It is possible that there is a failure related to the motherboard or a system device as well. Check PSU voltage and output.

Recommendation:

When there is an apparent failure of the system memory, there are a myriad of different possible causes. The most common causes of memory failure (or apparent failure) vary greatly depending on whether the memory is in an existing system or in one that was just assembled or recently upgraded. This is because memory failure in a new system is more often than not due to misconfiguration or using the wrong type of memory, while in a system where the memory once worked, it is more likely that the memory itself has gone bad.
Get a stronger PSU.


1 Long, then 2 Short Beeps: Video error

Explanation: The BIOS is unable to access the video system in order to write any error messages to the screen.

Diagnosis: This is usually caused by a problem with the video card, or the memory on the video card. It can also be a motherboard issue.

1 Long, then 3 Short Beeps: Video error

Explanation: The BIOS is unable to access the video system in order to write any error messages to the screen.

Diagnosis: This is usually caused by a problem with the video card, or the memory on the video card. It can also be a motherboard issue.

Continuous Beeping: Memory or video problem

Explanation: The system is producing constant beeping in no specific pattern, or a fast "ringing" sound.

Diagnosis: This is usually caused by a problem with the system memory, or possibly the video card. The memory is more likely--the system complains long and loud if it can't find any usable memory, as there is no way to even start the boot process when this is the case. The motherboard itself could also be the problem.

Other Beep Codes

Explanation: You have encountered an Award BIOS beep code I do not have documented.

Diagnosis: Award says that any beep patterns other than "one long followed by two short" are likely problems with the system memory. However, of late they have started adding other beep codes to their systems as well.


Ami Bios codes :

1 Beep: DRAM refresh failure

Explanation: The system is having a problem accessing the system memory to refresh it. Refreshing is done on all system memory to keep its contents active.

Diagnosis: This code usually means a problem either with the system memory or with the motherboard itself.

2 Beeps: Parity circuit failure

Explanation: The parity circuit is responsible for generating and checking the parity bit on the system memory when parity checking is used. This circuitry is not working properly.

Diagnosis: This code usually means a problem with either the system memory or the motherboard.

3 Beeps: Base 64K RAM failure

Explanation: There is a failure of some sort within the first 64 KB of system memory.

Diagnosis: The first bank of memory probably has a bad memory chip in it somewhere. It is possible that there is a failure related to the motherboard or a system device as well.

4 Beeps: System timer failure

Explanation: There is a problem with one or more of the timers used by the system to control functions on the motherboard.

Diagnosis: This is usually a motherboard failure.

5 Beeps: Processor failure

Explanation: The system processor is generating an error condition indicating a problem with it.

Diagnosis: There is a problem related to the processor or motherboard. Note that this doesn't mean that the processor is necessarily dead; with a dead processor the system won't boot at all (it runs the BIOS code that is used to start up the PC.)

6 Beeps: Keyboard controller / gate A20 failure

Explanation: The keyboard controller is a chip on the motherboard that communicates with your keyboard. It also controls the A20 gate that provides access to the high memory area (HMA). This component is indicating a failure.

Diagnosis: This is usually a problem with either the keyboard or the motherboard.

7 Beeps: Virtual mode exception error

Explanation: Virtual mode is one of the different modes that the processor can run in. The system is reporting an error when testing this mode.

Diagnosis: There is a problem related to the processor or motherboard. Note that this doesn't mean that the processor is necessarily dead, since the system won't boot at all with a dead processor.

8 Beeps: Display memory read/write failure

Explanation: The BIOS is unable to write to the frame buffer memory on the video card.

Diagnosis: This is usually caused by a problem with the video card, or the memory on the video card. It can also be a motherboard issue.

Note: Unlike the other AMI beep codes, this one is "non-fatal". The system may continue to boot despite this error.


9 Beeps: ROM BIOS checksum failure

Explanation: The read-only memory (ROM) containing the BIOS program (which is what is running when you turn on the PC and what generates this error) uses a checksum value as a double-check that the ROM code is correct. This checksum is compared against the values in the ROM each time the PC is booted and if there is a mismatch, this code is generated.

Note: This error is not the same as a CMOS Checksum Error, which refers to corrupted values of the CMOS settings, the ones you set through the BIOS setup program. This error means the contents of the BIOS code itself are damaged.


Diagnosis: The BIOS ROM chip on the motherboard is probably faulty. It could also be another component on the motherboard.

Recommendation: Troubleshoot the motherboard. It is possible to replace just the BIOS ROM chip but often replacing the motherboard will make more sense for cost and simplicity reasons.

10 Beeps: CMOS shutdown register read/write error

Explanation: A component of the motherboard is producing an error interacting with the CMOS memory that holds the BIOS settings.

Diagnosis: There is likely a problem with the motherboard.

11 Beeps: Cache memory error

Explanation: The system has attempted to verify the operation of the secondary (level 2) cache and has encountered an error.

Diagnosis: This usually means a problem with the system cache. It may also be a more general problem with the motherboard.

Continuous Beeping: Memory or video problem

Explanation: The system is producing constant beeping in no specific pattern, or a fast "ringing" sound.

Diagnosis: This is usually caused by a problem with the system memory, or possibly the video card. The memory is more likely--the system complains long and loud if it can't find any usable memory, as there is no way to even start the boot process when this is the case. The motherboard itself could also be the problem.

Other Beep Codes

Explanation: You have encountered an AMI BIOS beep code I do not have documented.

Diagnosis: Your BIOS either defines beep codes that are different than the standard AMI BIOS codes, or I have an omission in my list.

Recommendation:
Contact the vendor of the system or motherboard. They often have more specific information on beep codes.
Troubleshoot as an apparent motherboard problem (best chances of resolving an unknown problem).

xReAVeRx

Legacy Member
Continuous Beeping: Memory or video problem

Explanation: The system is producing constant beeping in no specific pattern, or a fast "ringing" sound.

Diagnosis: This is usually caused by a problem with the system memory, or possibly the video card. The memory is more likely--the system complains long and loud if it can't find any usable memory, as there is no way to even start the boot process when this is the case. The motherboard itself could also be the problem


kan da aan me radeon 9800 liggen dan ? die is pas nieuw en me mobo en ram ook.

NoochBoY

Legacy Member
Hebt ge nog een oude grafische kaart liggen? Steekt anders dedie er eens in?

Haal bijvoorbeeld ne keer uw RAM eruit en boot ne keer, kijk of hij geen ander geluid maakt, idem met de Grafische kaart...

greetz

xReAVeRx

Legacy Member
kheb me oude vidkaart ingestoken en nog altijd het zelfde probleem. zelfs zonder vidkaart. aan me ram kan het toch onmogelijk liggen kheb et pas van vanochtend

NoochBoY

Legacy Member
1 down, 2 to go... :)

aan uw ram kan het misschien moeilijk liggen, maar ge weet dat nooit, he... 'k Heb het al genoeg gehoord dat er mensen ne kapotte CPU gekregen hadden en zo...

Haalt ne keer gewoon uw RAM eruit en kijk eens wat ie doet. Of hij andere beeps geeft. Verder weet ik niks meer...

NoochBoY

Legacy Member
'k zou zeggen, boot hem eens met een bootdisk van memtest, maar hem boot nie, dus ja...

wachten tot er eventueel nog mensen den thread eens lezen...

Anders naar de winkel gaan waar ge't gekocht hebt en vragen of ze eens een ander latje ram kunnen insteken. Werkt het dan nog nie, dan is't waarschijnlijk uw mobo.

vinteg

Legacy Member
kwil ni stom doen ofzo, mer wie steekt er nu pc2100 in zenne A64 :eek:
ge castreerd uwe AMD dermee da weet ge toch hoop ik?

str0ntj3

Legacy Member
vinteg zei:
kwil ni stom doen ofzo, mer wie steekt er nu pc2100 in zenne A64 :eek:
ge castreerd uwe AMD dermee da weet ge toch hoop ik?
beetje veel maar :D
ale pc2100 in nen A64, da beestje wilt meer zenne

fast_bunny

Legacy Member
misschien iets niet goed aangelosten. anyway , da's de reden waarom ik altijd wel wat reserve onderdelen heb , altijd handig en een snelle manier om het problem part te detekteren
Het archief is een bevroren moment uit een vorige versie van dit forum, met andere regels en andere bazen. Deze posts weerspiegelen op geen enkele manier onze huidige ideeën, waarden of wereldbeelden en zijn op sommige plaatsen gecensureerd wegens ontoelaatbaar. Veel zijn in een andere tijdsgeest gemaakt, al dan niet ironisch - zoals in het ironische subforum Off-Topic - en zouden op dit moment niet meer gepost (mogen) worden. Toch bieden we dit archief nog graag aan als informatiedatabank en naslagwerk. Lees er hier meer over of start een gesprek met anderen.
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