gamerman4
Active Member
I recently replaced my stock HSF with a new SI-120, after booting up, it said it was in Fault-Safe Mode. I expected this to happen so I shutdown and reset the CMOS jumper. It went fine after doing this, it even booted up into Windows and I played around for a while. But after I shut it down, when I tried to boot back on, it told me my CPU name and RAM name but before the IDE disk detection (normally occurs) sequence starts, it just shuts down into some sort of low power state. It isn't completely off because my HDD LED and power LED and pretty much all the LEDs that were on when it went off were on but were very dim, similar to a low-power state. I couldn't boot back up so I turned off the power so the system would fully turn off. After turning power back on, it did the same thing.
The next time after turning the power off I reset the CMOS jumper again. Magically it boot up perfectly but the same thing happened again after I shut back down. I will get really annoyed if I have to reset my CMOS jumper after every shutdown just to get it back up and running. I think it might be a motherboard problem...
Now that I think of it, I should have looked at the POST code to see if there were any errors but I am at school now so I can't at this moment. Has anyone heard of this happening? I am about to email Abit to see if they can help me. Would this happen if my CPU was seating incorrectly? I don't think it is my CPU because after a BIOS reset, it runs fine until shutdown. Also, if I just restart the computer, not actually shutting it down, it won't have any problem. There has to be some kind of problem that is effecting my computer only on shutdown.
I could rig my computer reset button as a CMOS reset button but that would mean setting my overclock settings every single time after booting. The overclock is not the problem because I even tried using the Defaults and it didn't help anything.
EDIT: Could this be a problem due to a dead CMOS battery? I'll try replacing it but I don't think it would just go bad after less than a month of having this conmputer and I don't think it would go bad only after replacing the heatsink...
The next time after turning the power off I reset the CMOS jumper again. Magically it boot up perfectly but the same thing happened again after I shut back down. I will get really annoyed if I have to reset my CMOS jumper after every shutdown just to get it back up and running. I think it might be a motherboard problem...
Now that I think of it, I should have looked at the POST code to see if there were any errors but I am at school now so I can't at this moment. Has anyone heard of this happening? I am about to email Abit to see if they can help me. Would this happen if my CPU was seating incorrectly? I don't think it is my CPU because after a BIOS reset, it runs fine until shutdown. Also, if I just restart the computer, not actually shutting it down, it won't have any problem. There has to be some kind of problem that is effecting my computer only on shutdown.
I could rig my computer reset button as a CMOS reset button but that would mean setting my overclock settings every single time after booting. The overclock is not the problem because I even tried using the Defaults and it didn't help anything.
EDIT: Could this be a problem due to a dead CMOS battery? I'll try replacing it but I don't think it would just go bad after less than a month of having this conmputer and I don't think it would go bad only after replacing the heatsink...
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