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Gigabyte GA-NSNXP-939 Problems
I'd like some advice on some problems I'm having with my new setup. It's a
Gigabyte GA-K8NSNXP-939 mobo with AMD Athlon 3500+, Corsair 3200 memory, two Seagate 160GB SATA drives, ATI RADEON 9600 video, Artec case and XP Pro. Originally I only installed a single 160GB SATA drive. XP Pro installed ok although I recall it locked up at one stage but after rebooting it ran well for a few days. I didn't load much software initially. The first problem started with trying to write to a floppy. First time was ok but then the floppy drive failed and I assumed it was a bad floppy disk. Then I decided to add another 160GB drive and implement RAID. This took a while to do because I had no experience with RAID. The mobo has two separate SATA implementations (NVidia & Sil3512) - I opted to use the NVidia pair. I eventually got it working but the system frequently locks up, mostly when booting but also infrequently when operating. Locking up freezes the mouse & keyboard and Windows doesn't seem to notice that it didn't close down properly which puzzles me. I use a cordless Logitech keyboard & mouse but I think that is irrelevant. The floppy drive is still playing up. Again it seems to work ok once or so and then fails. Even BIOS reports the failure. I've tried three different physical floppy drives and always the same symptoms so I think there is a problem with the mobo or driver. The problems eventually got so bad that I decided to ditch RAID and reloaded everything again to a single hard disk. Unfortunately the problems continued. Some of the lockups occur when doing extensive CD work - reading mostly when loading programs. So I thought perhaps the IDE drivers were suspect. Sometimes it has problems detecting a CD in the drive. I have loaded the latest BIOS (F7) and all the latest drivers I can find. The system seems stable at present - ie it ran for two hours this morning without locking up. Overheating? The BIOS reports the CPU running between 15 degrees C and 17 degrees C. This seems a bit low to me but the fan speed goes up and down depending on the temperature. Front case temperature monitor display shows the sensor close to the CPU fan at about 33 -37 degrees C. The Gigabyte documentation is aweful - even by Taiwanese standards. Most of these guys have improved in the last few years but in my opinion Gigabyte is way behind the others in this area. The doco says to go to their web site for info on RAID - I couldn't find it but did find lots of info elsewhere on the web. The Dual BIOS is also confusing. I have F3 (original) in the backup BIOS and F7 in the normal BIOS - the machine sometimes boots from the backup without asking. I suspect its because of the lockups. In summary the lockups are random but occur mostly when booting - driver conflicts? Once running it is stable but any floppy work is out of the question and extensive CD work can cause a lockup. Some other lockups are just plain random. Other than the floppy problem the lockup symptoms are always the same - no keyboard or mouse movement. Other processes seem to be unaffected - on the odd occasion I've had something else running it seems to keep working. Sorry for the long post but thought the background would be useful. I see from some earlier posts on the 11th Dec that others have ditched this mobo for Asus. I'm leaning towards that as I had mobos from Asus before that worked fine. Anyone have any thoughts? If you mail me direct, please remove the underscore. TIA Cheers Paul |
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Be done with it get you an Asus A8V and be happy as we that heeded
the warnings about that gigacrap board are. |
#3
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"Paul" wrote in
: In summary the lockups are random but occur mostly when booting - driver conflicts? Once running it is stable but any floppy work is out of the question and extensive CD work can cause a lockup. Some other lockups are just plain random. Other than the floppy problem the lockup symptoms are always the same - no keyboard or mouse movement. Other processes seem to be unaffected - on the odd occasion I've had something else running it seems to keep working. [snip] Anyone have any thoughts? If you mail me direct, please remove the underscore. TIA Since CD access may be a factor, I'd try moving any optical drives to a different controller if possible. I had lockups on my MSI Neo2 Platinum with an older DVD-ROM drive on onboard PATA controller. |
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Further to my earlier e-mail. The thing locked up shortly after posting and
all I was doing was web browsing looking for info. CPU temp is now 41 c which seems more reasonable however I cannot find anything which states the 'normal' operating temp. Its not even on the product spec. Currently I'm reading through a swag of pdf files from AMD's site. Room temp is probably about 25 c (summer here). I was toying with the idea of writing a small program to display CPU temp. One other thing I forgot - on the PC status page in the BIOS it sometimes comes up with a string of 'fails' for voltage, temp checks and the like and says the CPU fan isn't running when it is. Seems like the BIOS is seriously screwed or perhaps I have a heat related issue on the mobo. Paul |
#5
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On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 03:21:52 +0000, Paul wrote:
One other thing I forgot - on the PC status page in the BIOS it sometimes comes up with a string of 'fails' for voltage, temp checks and the like and says the CPU fan isn't running when it is. Seems like the BIOS is seriously screwed or perhaps I have a heat related issue on the mobo. Sounds more like bad ram or a weak PSU to me. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
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Wes Newell wrote:
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 03:21:52 +0000, Paul wrote: One other thing I forgot - on the PC status page in the BIOS it sometimes comes up with a string of 'fails' for voltage, temp checks and the like and says the CPU fan isn't running when it is. Seems like the BIOS is seriously screwed or perhaps I have a heat related issue on the mobo. Sounds more like bad ram or a weak PSU to me. The RAM is Corsair Twinex (?) which the dealer chose for me. I remember it being expensive. I'll go look for a RAM testing program - haven't had to use one for years. The PSU is a 480W Antec which I would think was more than adequate. The thing that puzzles me is the floppy drive. I've not known many to fail except for dirty heads. The disks themselves can be unreliable especially if old. The bios accesses the drive once and then refuses to look at it again - almost as if the driver was getting corrupted/overwritten. When I first installed XP the system didn't have a floppy drive - I wasn't sure I needed one until I changed to RAID and then I had to load supplementary drivers by floppy - XP doesn't give any alternatives. I seem to have two choices: 1 - completely wipe the hard disks and start over again. 2 - pick another motherboard - apart from the cost I see that others have had problems with MSI boards as well. Paul |
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