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How to detect a dead CPU?



 
 
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  #11  
Old October 10th 03, 02:03 AM
Vanguard
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No video? Its BIOS is supposed to load so you can see the motherboard's
BIOS version, the result of a memory check, hardware info like CPU
speed, what drives were detected or hard configured in the mobo BIOS,
show the table of hardware devices (I forget what that table is called),
and eventually will beep once to let you know the POST has completed.
If you have no video at all, a defective video card whose BIOS won't
load will kill the POST right away. Yank out the video card and you
should get, I think, 1 long beep and 2 short beeps (for Award BIOS).

Do you have any memory installed?

You sure you have an onboard speaker or the external speaker is
connected to the 2-pin header on the motherboard so you can actually
hear the beeps?

See http://www.pcguide.com/ref/mbsys/bios/boot.htm for the boot
sequence.

Do you see the LEDs flash on the keyboard? That's due to the reset
signal.

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"ck26" wrote in message
...
You don't mention if it is by itself and you're just looking at it

or if
it is inserted into a motherboard. If in your hand, you can't tell
unless, like for an AMD, it got burned up because the heatsink came

off
it. If in a motherboard, the BIOS text and/or beep codes should
indicate a bad CPU; see http://www.bioscentral.com.


OK, its in situ - but I'm not getting any beeps at all. What, if

anything
does that mean for the CPU? I guess the bios beeps _after_ the CPU

starts
working, so does an absence of bios beeps mean that the CPU is _not_
working - I'm getting no boot / no video.




  #12  
Old October 10th 03, 04:21 AM
~misfit~
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"ck26" wrote in message
...
Try taking the CPU out and see if you get error beeps when you attempt

to
boot.


The same - no beeps. Is that indicative that the motherboard is faulty? Or
does it narrow it down to anything else?


Just a test to see if the mobo is working properly or if the CPU is stuffed.
If it had beeped with no CPU I'd say that pointed to the CPU being the
problem. As it didn't then it didn't really tell us anything one way or the
other.

As I'm so unsure - I've taken some images of the CPU itself as I'm really
not sure what it would look like if it had burned out. What is the

general
consensus - are these burn marks or valid glue / discoloration marks?

CPU Top: http://www33.brinkster.com/ck26/cpu/DSC00001a.jpg
CPU Bottom: http://www33.brinkster.com/ck26/cpu/DSC00002a.jpg
Heatsink thing(don't actually know what its called - the thing that sits
directly on the CPU:
http://www33.brinkster.com/ck26/cpu/DSC00003a.jpg

Socket: http://www33.brinkster.com/ck26/cpu/DSC00004a.jpg


Nothing obviously wrong there.
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  #13  
Old October 10th 03, 06:13 AM
Phrederik
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"ck26" wrote in message
...
Try taking the CPU out and see if you get error beeps when you attempt

to
boot.


The same - no beeps. Is that indicative that the motherboard is faulty? Or
does it narrow it down to anything else?


No CPU = No beeps...

HOW can the BIOS run to make the beeps if there is no CPU to run the BIOS
code?


  #14  
Old October 10th 03, 10:00 AM
ck26
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In the previous thread you mentioned a burning smell, right? If it
was the CPU getting THAT hot, it would have noticable, visual hints...
anywhere from significant discoloration to warpage, charring, peeling
of the top, or a dark spot underneith. When a CPU frys quickly
there's not necessarily as much visual damage, but from your account,
the smell, whatever happened didn't happen that quickly. The pictures
didn't show anything remarkable, out of the ordinary.


Thanks Dave and those of you who have taken a look. I guess then that the
CPU may still have a chance of being alive, but its not certain one way or
the other at the moment.

I still think it's the power supply, or next most-likely the
motherboard. If you examine the components under a strong light,
sometimes it can help to see what was burning.


I've taken everything out bit by bit and inspected them all under strong
light (I've taken the power supply apart too) and nothing shows any visible
signs of burn out / damage. The memory chips are fine - I know what burnt
out memory modules look and smell like. The motherboard's capacitors, and
other components all "look" fine. I guess looking fine and being fine may be
the hardest difference to detect. I haven't had a chance to go to a hardware
store for a voltmeter or to get a new power supply, so maybe this weekend,
I'll solve this mystery once and for all. I was just hoping I could avoid
spending any money on trying to detect what is wrong, just in case I need to
spend that money on a new machine.

Thanks all for your efforts, much appreciated.


  #15  
Old October 10th 03, 10:02 AM
ck26
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No CPU = No beeps...

HOW can the BIOS run to make the beeps if there is no CPU to run the BIOS
code?


I did think that and say that before I tried it, but hey, I'm desperate to
solve this!


  #16  
Old October 10th 03, 10:06 AM
ck26
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If you have no video at all, a defective video card whose BIOS won't
load will kill the POST right away. Yank out the video card and you
should get, I think, 1 long beep and 2 short beeps (for Award BIOS).


OK, I'll try that tonight. Thanks.

Do you have any memory installed?


Yes, and I'm sure the two modules are fine - I inspected them both for
scorch marks / smell.

You sure you have an onboard speaker or the external speaker is
connected to the 2-pin header on the motherboard so you can actually
hear the beeps?


Yup..

Do you see the LEDs flash on the keyboard? That's due to the reset
signal.


Hee hee, I have a cordless keyboard and mouse! I could try plugging a
"standard" one in though. Thanks for the tip.


  #17  
Old October 10th 03, 07:21 PM
Phrederik
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Well... if there was a smell when it died, the part should still smell.

Run your NOSE around the parts in question and see if you can find the
burnout that way.

....one stupid question...

Any chance that the MONITOR burned out and your PC is booting fine and you
just can't see it???

"ck26" wrote in message
...
In the previous thread you mentioned a burning smell, right? If it
was the CPU getting THAT hot, it would have noticable, visual hints...
anywhere from significant discoloration to warpage, charring, peeling
of the top, or a dark spot underneith. When a CPU frys quickly
there's not necessarily as much visual damage, but from your account,
the smell, whatever happened didn't happen that quickly. The pictures
didn't show anything remarkable, out of the ordinary.


Thanks Dave and those of you who have taken a look. I guess then that the
CPU may still have a chance of being alive, but its not certain one way or
the other at the moment.

I still think it's the power supply, or next most-likely the
motherboard. If you examine the components under a strong light,
sometimes it can help to see what was burning.


I've taken everything out bit by bit and inspected them all under strong
light (I've taken the power supply apart too) and nothing shows any

visible
signs of burn out / damage. The memory chips are fine - I know what burnt
out memory modules look and smell like. The motherboard's capacitors, and
other components all "look" fine. I guess looking fine and being fine may

be
the hardest difference to detect. I haven't had a chance to go to a

hardware
store for a voltmeter or to get a new power supply, so maybe this weekend,
I'll solve this mystery once and for all. I was just hoping I could avoid
spending any money on trying to detect what is wrong, just in case I need

to
spend that money on a new machine.

Thanks all for your efforts, much appreciated.




  #18  
Old October 10th 03, 07:52 PM
kony
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On Fri, 10 Oct 2003 10:00:24 +0100, "ck26" wrote:

snip
I was just hoping I could avoid
spending any money on trying to detect what is wrong, just in case I need to
spend that money on a new machine.


A cheap $5 voltage meter will suffice for the level of accuracy needed
to do simple testing of the power supply, and it's very handy to have
one in general.

Buy replacement parts that will accomodate future upgrades, so there
isn't any significant money wasted, you'll be on your way towards a
faster system still.


Dave
  #19  
Old October 10th 03, 08:03 PM
ck26
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Run your NOSE around the parts in question and see if you can find the
burnout that way.


Hmm, I'm no pervert, but OK, here goes... Nope - everything has a vague
electrical smell - particularly the heatsink. But I'm sure that's
normal-ish.

...one stupid question...

Any chance that the MONITOR burned out and your PC is booting fine and you
just can't see it???


That thought had crossed my mind - I have switched monitors and I can rule
that out for sure now.


  #20  
Old October 10th 03, 08:11 PM
ck26
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If you have no video at all, a defective video card whose BIOS won't
load will kill the POST right away. Yank out the video card and you
should get, I think, 1 long beep and 2 short beeps (for Award BIOS).


Right - I have an onboard graphics card (which I can't remove) and a PCI
card that was the card in use at the time of the "incident". I removed the
PCI video card and nothing - still the same - no beeps. I can't really
disable the onboard one other than by telling the bios to use the PCI rather
than onboard AGP video - which I did when I first installed the new card.
Either way, I'm pretty sure its not the video now.

Do you see the LEDs flash on the keyboard? That's due to the reset
signal.


I connected a normal keyboard to see any lights being displayed upon boot.
Nope. No lights. No beeps.

See http://www.pcguide.com/ref/mbsys/bios/boot.htm for the boot sequence.


Great stuff on the beeps - shame there's nothing about no beeps!


 




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