Had a similar problem with same board & setup.
You have to specify in the BIOS what type of video card you're using (i.e. PCI vs. AGP as the initial video: Init Display First), and the memory it has (i.e. AGP Aparature Size = 128MB, 256MB, etc.). That and setting the boot order will probably get you where you need to be.
I haven't been able to get it to boot to CD, though. Luckily at the time I was just upgrading to this board from an earlier 1.6 GHz P4 CPU to a 3.0 GHz Dual-Core Pentium D, so I didn't need that. But now, a little over a month later, the OS is having registry corruption issues and I do... Probably board is messed up as I've cleared the BIOS and re-setup all the options I needed that got it working before and it still doesn't boot to CD. I mention that I cleared the BIOS above because one time before that I managed to do that (remove the battery, replace) and it booted to the hard drive fine without those pesky registry issues, but then after the very next restart it has registry issues again.
But, again, boot to CD never worked... I figured it was something I could get around to later, try replacing the CD drive, etc., but the thing has 2 CD drives and neither would boot, though they did read a discs when Windows was working before, and the "Press any key to boot to CD..." shows up, just when you hit "any" key, you just get a black screen and a lot of CD-ROM activity like something should be showing, but just doesn't. There was this one Linux boot disk I have that starts DOS... it actually gets further and finishes the Linux part, but hangs at the beginning of starting DOS..... Even with replacing the Windows registry files with backup files from C:\System Volume Information\{long number}\restore\RP{number}\snapshot using another computer and an IDE-USB adapter, it still complains..... Not sure if the hardware corrupted the software, or if the 2 are un-related, but it's weird, nonetheless....
Last edited by navyjax2; Oct 6th, 2007 at 1:06 am. Reason: Clarity