943,454 Members | Top Members by Rank

Ad:
You are currently viewing page 2 of this multi-page discussion thread; Jump to the first page
Nov 30th, 2004
0

Re: D815EEA restarts when windows logo come

Again try booting up with no extra cards or builtin features on (go into bios and disable onboard sound, graphics, nic, etc...) so you basically only have the video card and hard drive attached to the mother board when you boot. You may also want to download Memtest 3.1A and run it to test your RAM (RAM probably isn't the issue but another thing to try), also try a different power supply.

It may be that an onboard feature is defective, I had the builtin LAN go out on the kid's pc and it would crash until I disabled it so I just put in a cheap Intel NIC I had laying around and all is well.
Reputation Points: 11
Solved Threads: 1
Junior Poster in Training
borumas is offline Offline
56 posts
since Dec 2003
Dec 1st, 2004
0

Re: D815EEA restarts when windows logo come

i have did this all u write to me but did not solve problm.can u guide me in its
rapairing ( Mainboard D815EEA ). i can do evry soldring level work.

Quote originally posted by borumas ...
Again try booting up with no extra cards or builtin features on (go into bios and disable onboard sound, graphics, nic, etc...) so you basically only have the video card and hard drive attached to the mother board when you boot. You may also want to download Memtest 3.1A and run it to test your RAM (RAM probably isn't the issue but another thing to try), also try a different power supply.

It may be that an onboard feature is defective, I had the builtin LAN go out on the kid's pc and it would crash until I disabled it so I just put in a cheap Intel NIC I had laying around and all is well.
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
Newbie Poster
LalaG is offline Offline
5 posts
since Nov 2004
Dec 1st, 2004
0

Re: D815EEA restarts when windows logo come

Well if your going for component level repair your in for a hard time unless you can spot some obvious leaky capacitors or open resisters on the board. A leaky capacitor will have some crud on the top of it usually so it will be easy to spot, I guess you could desolder it and find and exact replacement but there may be other issues as well and without a spec sheet on the board giving you reference points for voltage measurement and whatnot it would be hard to pinpoint a problem like that (been about 5 years since I had electronics classes in college so don't remember to much of that stuff). A bad cap or IC chip should look burned or broken so break out the flashlight and check out the board.
Unforetunately it would probably be easier to just replace that motherboard.
Reputation Points: 11
Solved Threads: 1
Junior Poster in Training
borumas is offline Offline
56 posts
since Dec 2003

This thread is more than three months old

No one has posted to this discussion for at least three months. Please let old threads die and do not reply to them unless you feel you have something new and valuable to contribute that absolutely must be added to make the discussion complete. Otherwise, please start a new thread in this forum instead.
Message:
Previous Thread in Motherboards, CPUs and RAM Forum Timeline: Drivers for MSI845G Max (MS6580 v1.0A)
Next Thread in Motherboards, CPUs and RAM Forum Timeline: Asus SLI nforce4 price estimate





About Us | Contact Us | Advertise | Acceptable Use Policy
Forum Index | Build Custom RSS Feed


Follow us on Twitter


© 2011 DaniWeb® LLC